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Nucleon Spin Structure at Low Q2 from EG4 Experiment. Krishna Adhikari, Physics Department, ODU Dec. 04, 2007 Abstract The main goal of the EG4 experiment is to measure the spin structure function g1of the proton and the neutron, its first moment Γ1 and then the GDH integral in the very low momentum transfer regime where it will provide a test for the chiral-perturbation theory as the low-energy QCD approximation which makes stringent predictions in this regime. Here, I will give a brief overview of the experiment. I will also give the motivation, procedure and the results of the EC-timing calibration work and rastercorrection work that I was involved in. A brief general overview of the future work is also given. Introduction and Motivation The goal of the natural sciences as a whole is to understand the natural world – to understand its structure and the underlying principles as much as possible and make the things look simple, more appealing and easy to deal with. From years, decades and centuries of experimental and theoretical scientific effort, we have come to know a lot about our nature, and we have already been exploiting those scientific achievements whenever and wherever we find them useful. From our own field of physics, for example, we know a lot about the properties of the bulk matter, about the atomic structure and we also know a little bit (if not a lot) about the even lower sub-stratum of the world, i.e. the sub-microscopic world of nuclei, nucleons and many other sub-nuclear particles. In spite of achieving such an unprecedented level of knowledge and understanding, there are still a lot of problems and questions that remain unsolved and unanswered. One such thing that has drawn a great attention from the nuclear and particle physics community is the spin structure of the nucleons (i.e. of the protons and the neutrons). Fig: Quarks as one of the the fundamental building blocks of matter. (17) The interest in the nucleon structures began ever since the measurement/discovery of the nucleon anomalous magnetic moments, which contradicted with the existing belief that they were Dirac particles with spin-1/2 and no structure (i.e., point particles). Dirac’s prediction for a point like particle of charge q, mass M and spin S is D = q S/M, but the measurements showed that p = 2.79 N and n = - 1.91 N, where N = e /2Mp = 3.1525*10-14 MeV/T = 5.050 783 24(13) × 10-27 J.T.-1 is the Nuclear magneton. These anomalous magnetic moments were the first concrete signatures of the nucleon substructure. Many decades later, experiments at powerful accelerators provided independent confirmations of the nucleon substructure. (4). A truly vast amount of data on the inelastic structure of the nucleons has been accumulated over the past 40 years from both fixed target and colliding beam experiments with polarized as well as un-polarized incident photons, electrons, muons and (anti-neutrinos) on a variety of targets (both polarized and un-polarized) from hydrogen through iron. (2) [Photon and lepton scattering has been the predominant and very powerful method to probe the composite systems like nucleons, nuclei or even atoms for three primary reasons: (a) photons and leptons are point-like particles with no known substructure or excited states; (b) the underlying electro-weak interaction is well understood; (c) the interaction is sufficiently weak (so they can penetrate deeply into the target without disturbing its substructure, thus enabling the extraction of the internal structure of the target with a relatively easy interpretation following a perturbative treatment.)] The initial measurements at SLAC confirmed the quark-parton picture of the nucleon. Since then more precise measurements have been conducted at several accelerators, improving our knowledge and understanding about the nucleon structure (both spin-dependent and spin-averaged), and, at the same time, continuing to give us new and sometimes very surprising results such as the original “EMC-Effect”, the violation of Gottfried sum rule, even giving some hints that quarks might have substructure. (2) : energy transfer Q2: - (4-momentum transfer) 2 W2 = M2+2M-Q2: (Invariant mass)2 Q = Q2/(2M): Bjorken scaling variable (momentum fraction carried by struc quark) Spin Structure of Nucleons With such a vast amount of experimental data available from DIS experiments, a lot is known about the spin-averaged quark structure of the nucleon, but a lot less is known about the spin-structure of the nucleon in terms of its constituents – quarks and gluons. (2) In a simple non-relativistic model one would expect the quarks to carry the entire spin of the nucleon, but one of the early rather realistic theories that explained the partonic substructure of the nucleon, the Naïve Parton Model (NPM), predicted that 60% of the nucleon spin is carried by the quarks. (7) After the polarized beam and target technologies were greatly advanced during the last two decades, many subsequent experiments have contributed to the extraction of the spin structure functions g1 and g2, which are related to the spin carried by the quarks in the nucleon. One of the first experiments carried out at SLAC, in a limited kinematic region, seemed to confirm the predictions of the NPM. However, subsequent more precise measurement at a larger kinematic region performed by the EMC experiment at CERN reported that, contrary to the NPM predictions, only 1217% (i.e., practically none) of the spin is carried by the quarks. This discovery of the so-called “spin crisis” has sparked a large interest in measuring the spin content of the nucleon, giving birth to several experiments (underway and proposed) around the globe. The subsequent theoretical developments of QCD have clarified our picture of the nucleon spin structure in great detail. The so-called Bjorken sum rule, which relates results of the inclusive, polarized deep inelastic lepton-nucleon scattering to the fundamental axial coupling constant (gA), is a precise test of QCD. The interpretation of existing DIS results has verified the Bjorken sum rule at the level of 10% accuracy and has shown that only about 3010% of the nucleon spin is carried by the quarks; the rest of the spin must reside either in gluons or orbital angular momentum of its constituents. Experiments to measure the gluon contribution are underway at DESY, BNL and CERN. (7) Probing the nucleon structure at the other end of the energy scale provides information about the long distance structure, which is associated with static properties of the nucleon. At the real photon point (four-momentum transfer squared, Q2 = 0), the Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn (GDH) sum rule, which is based on very general principles, relates the total cross-section of polarized photons on polarized nucleons with the anomalous magnetic moment of the nucleon. Although formulated in the 1960’s, the sum rule remained unappreciated until Anselmino et al. pointed out the importance of it in an attempt to solve the “spin crisis”. They showed that the GDH sum rule is intimately connected to the DIS region and, in fact, is the analytic extension of the Bjorken sum rule towards the real photon point. It implies a negative slope (w. r. t. Q2) of 1, the first moment of the spin structure function g1, at the photo-absorption point. Later, Burkert et al. pointed out that the rapid transition of 1 between the real photon point and the DIS region is saturated by contributions from nucleon resonances. Since then Ji et al. have extended the GDH sum rule beyond the real photon point. (7) This progress in theoretical work has triggered a large interest in measuring the spin structure functions and their moments in this relatively unexplored transition regime, between the real photon point and the DIS region. There is a large experimental program underway at Jlab, in Newport News, VA to make precise measurements in this region. Experiment E03 – 006 (also called EG4-experiment) “The measurement of the GDH integral on the proton and deuteron at low Q2 (0.01 – 0.5 GeV2)” was performed in Hall B (from February to May 2006) with the goal of measuring the spin structure function g1, its first moment 1, and the GDH sum over the largely unexplored kinematic range Q2 = (0.01 – 0.5 GeV2) by measuring the helicity (projection of spin in the momentum direction; see fig. below) dependent absolute inclusive cross-section difference. The topics that can be studied from the data set of this experiment include an experimental verification of chiral perturbation theory (PT) and future lattice QCD calculations for 1. [Fig: Positive (right-handed) and negative (left-handed) helicities for a particle] The Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn (GDH) sum rule: Sum rules are relations linking an integral over structure functions to quantities characterizing the target. (19) Polarized sum rules involving the spin structure of the nucleon like those due to Bjorken, Burkhardt-Cottingham, the one due to Ellis and Jaffe and the one due to Gerasimov, Drell and Hearn offer the opportunity to study the structure of strong interactions. At long distance scales i.e., in the confinement regime, the Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn (GDH) Sum Rule (derived in 1966) connects static properties of the nucleon like the anomalous magnetic moment and the nucleon mass M, with the spin dependent absorption of real photons with total cross sections 3/2 and 1/2: 2 2 d 3 2 12 2 M2 th (1) Hence the full spin-dependent excitation spectrum of the nucleon is related to its static properties. The sum rule has not been investigated experimentally until recently. For the first time, this fundamental sum rule is verified by the GDH-Collaboration with circularly polarized real photons and longitudinally polarized nucleons at the two accelerators ELSA and MAMI. The "sum" on the left hand side of the GDH Sum Rule can be generalized to the case of virtual photons (i.e. Q 2> 0): I Q 2 d 12 x, Q 2 3 2 x, Q 2 Q 2 2M 8 2 Q2 2 2 2 0 dx g1 x, Q g 2 x, Q K 0 x x (2) Here x = Q2/2Mν0 and K is the flux factor of virtual photons ν √ 1+γ2 , and γ2 = Q 2 2 / ν . This reduces to the GDH sum rule for Q2=0. In the DIS limit the integral becomes: 8 2 2 IQ Q2 x0 16 2 g x dx 1 1 2 Q 0 (3) Where Γ1 is the first moment of g1. Studying the GDH sum rule at various Q2 allows us to establish a Q2 dependency and to investigate the question of the transition from the high Q2 to the low Q2 regimes of QCD. The change of signs that occurs in the region 0 < Q2 < 1 GeV2 is particularly interesting. This is the subject of several experiments such as EG1a, EG1b and EG4 at JLab for the resonance region and of the HERMES experiment at DESY for higher Q2. (10) In this paper, I will briefly describe the EG4 experiment, which I am related to. Then, I will focus more on the work that I did so far as a member of this experimental group. After that I will give an overview of the future work. Method: The goal of the EG4 experiment is to extract g1, Γ1 and finally to determine the extended GDH sum by directly measuring the helicity dependent absolute inclusive cross section differences for scattering of longitudinally polarized electrons from the longitudinally polarized NH3 and ND3 targets in Hall B, Jlab at Q2 = 0.01 – 0.5 GeV2 and in a large x (or W) range. This kinematics extends the existing measurements to the region of applicability of Chiral theories and low energy expansion, providing the tool to experimentally test these predictions as well as other phenomenological models. In addition the minimum Q2 is low enough to allow the evaluation of the GDH sum rule by extrapolating to the photon point. (18) The method to be employed in this experiment is to measure the helicity dependent cross-section difference at very low Q2. d d 4 2 E ' E E ' cos g1 x, Q 2 2Mxg2 x, Q 2 (4) dE ' d dE ' d Q 2 ME Where and are the inclusive cross sections for anti-parallel and parallel beam-target spins. From the difference one can extract the structure function g1 (because the second term with g2 is negligible at very low Q2 values), which in turn, can be used to evaluate its first moment , and the GDH sum over the kinematic range. xth 2 (5) g1 x, Q dx 0 The cross-section difference on the left of equation (4) is obtained using the following relation, I 2 Q 2 16 GDH Q2 d d N N 1 dE ' d dE ' d N i t f Pb Pt (6) Where N and N are the number of events detected for the parallel and antiparallel beam-target spin configurations respectively. Likewise, N i , t, , f and Pb Pt are the number of incident electrons (to be obtained from the charge measured in Faraday cup), the so-called target areal-density (the product of the target number density () and the target length along the beam direction), the detector acceptance for the given kinematic bin, corresponding detector efficiency and the product of beam & target polarizations respectively. The Experiment As said before, the goal of the EG4 experiment is to measure the GerasimovDrell-Hearn integral and investigate the nucleon spin-structure at very low Q2 range where chiral perturbation theory as the low-energy QCD approximation makes stringent predictions. This experiment took place at the experimental Hall B of the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (TJNAF), where the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF) delivers beam to three experimental halls. The CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS detector) in hall B was used to make the scattering measurements. The set-up can be roughly divided into three parts: beam, target and the CLAS detector. A schematic of the experimental set-up (with a vertical cross-sectional view along the beam line) is shown below. 1) The beam: The CEBAF can generate polarized as well as un-polarized electron beams. By exposing a semiconductor material surface such as that of GaAs with a circularly polarized laser photon beam, the polarized electrons are produced and then sent to CEBAF for acceleration. (7) These longitudinally polarized (Pb = 85 – 87 %) high intensity ‘continuous’ beams - with energies 3.0, 2.3, 2.0, (1.5 – for commissioning), 1.3 and 1.0 GeV (in our case) are then sent to the Hall-B for the experiment. The beam polarization is measured by the usual Hall B Moller polarimeter, but the product of beam and target polarization is being extracted from the quasi-elastic data. 2) Polarized Target: In this experiment, the standard cryogenic NH3 and ND3 targets were polarized using the technique of Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (DNP) and used as the proton and deuteron targets respectively. The targets were maintained in a liquid helium bath at 1K and a 5T longitudinal magnetic field. (This field also serves another important purpose: focusing the low momentum Moeller electrons in the forward direction, which are then collected by the “Moeller Shield”). The targets were positioned 1m upstream of the usual CLAS center to enhance/extend the low Q2 coverage to Q2 = 0.015 GeV2. NMR signals were used to monitor the target polarization during the experimental run. One can also evaluate the target polarization from the off-line analysis of quasi-elastic events, which are recorded simultaneously with the inelastic events thanks to the large CLAS acceptance. A 12C and an empty cell targets were used to have data for background measurements. 3) The CLAS detector: CLAS (the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer), housed in JHall B (Jlab), is a nearly 4 -particle final-state reactions 34 induced by photons and electrons at luminosities up to 10 cm-2sec-1. (11) The CLAS detector [3] is divided into 6 identical sectors (each functioning as independent magnetic spectrometers) with a super-conducting coil (called Torus) located in between each two of them. Each sector has three layers of drift chambers (DC) and one layer of time-offlight (TOF) or scintillator counters (SC), which cover the full detector acceptance. Each sector also has a Cherenkov counter (CC) and an electromagnetic calorimeter (EC) installed in the forward region from 8o to 45o. Fig: A schematic view of CLAS sectors and a cross-section (along the beamline) showing two sectors The torus magnet setup consists of 6 super-conducting coils to produce a magnetic field up to 2.7 Tesla in the direction, surrounding the beam line. The magnetic field causes the charged particles to bend when they are flying through. If the electron bends towards the beam line, we call it in-bending, otherwise out-bending. This allows one to judge the charge type and measure the momenta of charged particles according to their bending trajectories. In order to perform an absolute cross section measurement, the CLAS set-up with a few modifications was used. In contrast to the usual configuration, an out-bending (for electrons) Torus magnetic field was applied in this experiment to be able to make measurements down to as low as 6 degrees. A new (Moeller) Shield made of Tungsten (higher density than Lead) was put in place to suppress low-momentum background electrons (also called Moeller electrons because they originate due to the Moeller scattering from the atomic electrons), optimized for small angle () operation at high luminosity. CLAS Drift Chambers:Charged particles in CLAS are tracked by a set of drift chambers (DC). A drift chamber has thin wires fixed in a volume filled with a special gas in a way that the wires form cells. Inside these cells a traversing charged particle ionizes the gas. Due to the positive electrical potentials applied to the wires, the electrons drift to the sense wires. The connected electronics measures the charge of the signals and the corresponding times the signals appear. The difference between this signal arrival time and the time when the particle traversed the cell (measured by other detectors) is used to reconstruct the particle impact points in the chamber virtual planes. (22) Using such impact points, one can re-construct the track of the traversing particle. Charged Track Events in CLAS showing signals in all 6 superlayers (2 per region) of 2 DC sectors. (21) The CLAS drift chambers are arranged in three regions: Region 1 is located closest to the target, within the (nearly) field free region inside the Torus bore, and is used to determine the initial direction of charged particle tracks. Region 2 is located between the six super-conducting Torus coils, in the region of strong toroidal magnetic field (up to 2.7 Tesla (23)), and is used to obtain a second measurement of the particle track at a point where the curvature is maximal, to achieve good energy resolution. Region 3 is located outside the coils, again in a region with low magnetic field, and measures the final direction of charged particles headed towards the outer TOF, CC and the EC counters. All three regions consist of six separate sectors, one for each of the six sectors of the CLAS. So, there are 18 different drift chambers in CLAS (21). The DC information is important for energy, momentum and angle determination as well as for particle identification. In this experiment, the drift chamber system was used in the standard CLAS configuration. CLAS Cherenkov counters: The Cherenkov Counter (CC) serves the dual function of triggering on electrons and separating electrons from pions (or identifying charged particles). These detectors use the light emitted by Cherenkov radiation (emission of light when the charged particle travels faster than light in the medium) to measure the particle velocity (and therefore ). The knowledge of combined with the particle momentum (from the tracking detectors) determines the particle mass, thus giving us the clue for the particle ID. Choosing different gases to fill in, the index (n) of refraction is carefully optimized for the particle masses and momentum range of the experiment in question. Threshold counters record all light produced, thus providing a signal whenever is above the threshold t = 1/n. CLAS uses one Cherenkov threshold detector in each of the six sectors in the forward region from 8o to 45o. A new gas threshold Cerenkov counter designed and built by INFN – Genova, Italy, was installed in the 6th sector. This detector is specifically designed for the outbending field configuration, which is necessary to reach the desired low momentum transfer (measurements down to 6 degrees). This new detector has a very high and uniform electron detection efficiency (~99.9%) to allow the measurement of the absolute Old CLAS-Cherenkov detector optics New Cherenkov detector. cross-section with minimal corrections and a high pion rejection ratio (of the order of 103 ). Because, we’ll have an overwhelmingly large amount of scattering at smaller angles, for reasons of limited data storage capability, only those events corresponding to the scattering in the 6th sector will be taken into account. (6) CLAS Time of Flight (TOF) or Scintillator Counters (SC): The TOF system (here used in the standard CLAS configuration) provides a high-resolution (~ 140 ps) timing measurement that can be used for the velocity and mass calculation purpose. A scintillation counter measures ionizing radiation using a scintillator, consisting of a transparent crystal, usually phosphor, plastic (CLAS uses 5 cm thick BC408) (23) that fluoresces when struck by the ionizing radiation. A sensitive photo-multiplier tube (PMT) attached to an electronics measures the light from the crystal. Scintillation counters typically have a poor spatial resolution but a very good time resolution. They are also continuously sensitive, and are therefore often used as triggers for other types of detectors. In EG4, the CLAS was triggered by requiring a coincidence between the forward electromagnetic calorimeter (EC) and the new INFN Cerenkov counter (CC) which was installed only in the sixth sector. (9) Forward electromagnetic calorimeters (EC): Each CLAS sector has an electromagnetic sampling calorimeter (EC) in the forward region (8<<45). These electromagnetic shower calorimeters are optimized for measuring the energies and positions of electrons and gammas. (11) EC helps to discriminate electrons from hadrons and photons from neutrons. When a high-energy particle passes through, a fraction of its energy is deposited in the form of an electromagnetic shower (because of Bremsstrahlung and electron pair production). This shower produces a signal (in the scintillators – the active material) proportional to the energy deposit, which is recorded by the EC read-out. The calorimeter is made of alternating layers of scintillator (SC) strips (36 strips per layer) and lead (Pb) sheets with a total thickness of 16 radiation lengths. In order to match the hexagonal geometry of the CLAS, the Pb-SC sandwich is made to have the shape of an equilateral triangle. There are 39 layers in the sandwich, each consisting of a 10 mm thick SC followed by a 2.2 mm thick lead sheet. Exploded view of one of the six electromagnetic calorimeter modules. CLAS Schematic vertical cut of EC light readout system. PMT – Photomultiplier, LG – Light Guide, FOBIN – Fiber Optic Bundle Inner, FOBOU – Fiber Optic Bundle Outer, SC –Scintillators, Pb – 2.2 mm Lead Sheets, IP – Inner Plate (for support) The calorimeter has a “projective” geometry, in which the area of each successive layer increases. This minimizes shower leakage at the edges of the active volume and minimizes the dispersion in arrival times of signals originating in different scintillator layers. The active volume of the sandwich thus forms a truncated triangular pyramid with a projected vertex at the CLAS target point 5 meters away and an area at the base of 8 m2. The projective geometry to maximizes position resolution for neutral particles. For the purposes of readout, each SC layer is made of 36 strips parallel to one side of the triangle, with the orientation of the strips rotated by 120 in each successive layer. Thus there are three orientations or view (labeled U, V, and W), each containing 13 layers, which provide stereo information on the location of energy deposition. Each view is further subdivided into an inner (5 layers) and outer (8 layers) stack, to provide longitudinal sampling of the shower for improved hadron identification (or electron-pion discrimination; the electron-pion rejection factor is ~0.01.). Each module thus requires 36 (strips)* 3(views)*2(stacks) = 216 PMTs. Altogether there are 1296 PMTs and 8424 scintillator strips in the six EC modules used in CLAS. The intrinsic energy resolution for showering particles is 10%/ E , with approximately a 3 cm position resolution at 1 GeV. These detectors have up to 60% efficiency for detecting high momentum neutrons. (23) With its good energy and position resolution, the main functions of EC are: (a) Detection and primary triggering of electrons at energies above 0.5 GeV. The total energy deposited in the EC is available at the trigger level to reject minimum ionizing particles or to select a particular range of scattered electron energy. (b) Detection of photons at energies above 0.2 GeV. Allowing 0 and reconstruction from the measurement of their 2 decays. (c) Detection of neutrons, with discrimination between photons and neutrons using TOF measurements. (11) In our experiment, DC, SC and EC counters were used in the standard CLAS configuration. The modifications were only in CC, Torus polarity, the Moeller shield, and the position of the target relative to the CLAS center. My Work and Results: (A) EC-timing Calibration: Introduction and Purpose: As with any measurement, it is expected that, for various reasons, the measured signals from various detector components suffer unwanted changes and biases that need some adjustments. Also, during the experiment, digital signals from Amplitude (ADC) and Time (TDC) sensitive electronics are written to tape. Such signals from all devices have to be converted into meaningful physical quantities like time, position etc., before the first pass of the data analysis can begin. Getting rid of such unwanted changes, and converting the recorded signals into corresponding meaningful physical quantities before the data is actually analyzed is called Calibration. Depending on what signals and quantities we are interested in, there are several types of calibrations that is to be done on the EG4 data. One of them is the EC timing calibration. Systematic changes over the time in the time response of the EC and SC detectors can appear due to hardware changes. For example, the replacement of the cables connecting the PMTs (Photo-multiplier tubes) to the front-end electronics, the replacement of PMTs themselves etc. may result in such changes. This kind of things can happen whenever some hardware work is done (usually in between different experiments). In addition, the calibrations of different detector systems are somewhat interconnected. For example, in our case, the EC time is calibrated with respect to the time of flight, as we look at (EC_t -SC_t). Similarly the time of flight are calibrated with respect to the RF signals coming from the accelerator. Changes in other systems (the RF, for example, which can change every time the machine is retuned) can affect the calibrations of the TOF and EC. (3,14) There are several possible uses for good EC timing calibration in CLAS. Discriminating neutrons from photons is crucial in many channels studied in Hall B. Since the EC counter is particularly sensitive to neutral particles like photons and neutrons (DCs don’t detect them), good calibration of its timing is a requirement for any analysis that looks at events containing such particles. In particular, one can use the time of flight from the target to the EC to discriminate between the neutral particles such as photons and neutrons, and to calculate the neutron kinetic energy. Neutrons are discriminated from photons based on ; the current code considers that neutrals with <0.9 are neutrons and photons otherwise. In order to achieve good separation, good EC timing is essential. (26) In addition, timing information is also needed to convert the signal from the drift chambers into precise position information and to determine from which beam "bucket" a scattered electron originated. The EC can fulfill this function in cases where any channels in the time-of-flight counters are inoperative in the forward region of the spectrometer, the EC timing resolution for the charged particles is sufficient to provide a start time for the drift chambers and to identify the RF pulse corresponding to the beam electron initiating the event. (3,11) Procedure: The timing calibration of the EC was performed by comparing the EC and SC time for each SC paddle using charged particles which passed through both the time-of-flight scintillators (TOF or SC) and the forward calorimeter (EC). Electrons and charged pions were used simultaneously to span the full range of angles and deposited energy. Only events with a single charged track in a given sector were used. Using a large sample of data (1-2 M charged particle events), a chi-squared minimization was performed to compare the timing from the TOF detectors to that of the EC using a fiveparameter model for the EC time. The five parameters of the model included an additive constant, a TDC slope parameter, one walk correction parameter, and two parameters to take into account time slewing due to geometric effects. The signal propagation velocity was assumed to be constant. Although each calculation of the chi-squared involved a separate pass through all data, the entire calibration procedure required only about 30 min for a given data set. (11) Assuming a first set of calibration constant is already in place, an iteration to improve them took 3 steps: 1) Analyze/process/cook the raw data. 2) Then the command '/home/adhikari/bin/LinuxRHEL3/ec_time' is used to execute the updated calibration code. 3) Check if the calibration run was successful by looking at the various types of resultant monitoring histograms. If the results are satisfactory, execute /home/adhikari/bin/LinuxRHEL3/fout_map (creates several text files that can be used to insert the constants in the calibration database) to retrieve the generated calibration constants and update the code accordingly. 4) Repeat the procedure until the Gaussian fit of the EC time mean and the resolution is brought to the satisfactory level (mean within 50 ps and the width below 300 ps). Results: One of the histograms resulting from the EC-timing calibration run, showing the distribution of ECt – SCt for all charged particles in the sector-6, from a typical run 51057 can be seen below (left one). In the right side figure above, we can see one of many 2-dimensional histograms, which shows of all the neutral particles in the first sector (for the run 50808). The vertical axis represents the distance (in cm) of the calorimeter hit from the target vertex. The two bands represent the hits in the inner and outer part of the calorimeter. The plot above shows the stability of the calibration achieved (from the latest pass-zero iteration) where the mean and sigma of ECt–SCt (in nanoseconds) for electrons is plotted as a function of the run number. The average timing resolutions/accuracies obtained after the calibration so far is of the order of 300 ps for electrons and 400-500 ps for the hadrons. The beta spectrum for neutral particles reconstructed from the EC. The peak at beta=1 is or he photons while the shoulder on the left of the peak is for the neutrons. The invariant mass of two photons as reconstructed from the EC (The clear peak at the 0 mass, indicates that there was an undetected 0 in the reaction.) B) Raster-correction: (i)Why beam rastering: The electron beam generated at CEBAF is a high current beam, with a very small transverse size (200 m FWHM). This beam is rastered using the socalled fast raster system, 25 meters upstream of the target, designed to increase the effective beam size in order to prevent damage to the target or the beam dump and also to prevent local boiling in the cryogenic targets. The fast raster system consists of two sets of steering magnets. The first set rasters the beam vertically, and the second rasters the beam horizontally. The current driving the magnets are varied sinusoidally, at frequencies and phases such that the beam spirals continuously to cover a circular area of the target. (ii)Why Raster-correction: In EG4, the beam was rastered using two magnets up-beam of the target. ADC’s recorded the current going to these magnets, and the values are stored in the BOS files for each trigger. To make the similar ADC values for an earlier similar experiment (EG1b) useful, a procedure was developed and employed by P. Bosted et al. (12) to translate ADC counts into the corresponding x and y values relative to the CLAS beam line. This could then be used to make corrections to the tracking (which assumes x and y are zero), which allows better z vertex reconstruction. This allows better rejection of events from up-beam and down-beam windows (especially for particles at small angles), and could also be used to reduce accidental coincidences in multi-particle final states (or to look for offset decays such as from the ). Knowing x and y allows a correction to the angle of the particles to be made, improving missing mass resolution for multi-particle final states. Finally, plotting the number of events as a function of raster information is useful in looking for mis-steered beam that hit the edges of the target cups. (iii) Goal: My task for EG4 was to repeat the raster system calibration following the same procedure as for EG1. This required me to find the conversion factors and offsets for both the x and the y direction. (iv) Method: Assuming the raster magnets have a linear relation to position, we fit the x and y raster ADC values using the form: where Xo, Yo, cx and cy are the fit parameters to be fitted, X and Y are the ADC values and x, y are the raster positions in cm. For the fitting we select electrons from the exclusive events and the we minimize the 2 as defined below. Where z0 is also a fit parameter that defines the target center and z c is the corrected vetex position given by zc = znom + x’/tan() where znom is the vertex z found by the tracking code assuming x = y = 0, is the particle angle relative to the beam line, and x’ = [x cos(s) + y sin(s)] / cos( - s) is a measure of the distance in cm along the track length that was not taken into account in the tracking. Here, s is the sector angle given in degrees by s = (S-1)*60, where S is the sector number from 1 to 6 and is the azimuthal angle of the particle in the same coordinate system, defined as = atan2(px, py), where px and py are the RECSIS momentum components in the x and y directions. (iv) Results: A code has been written using the standard data analysis and visualization code ROOT (developed by CERN), which evaluates the five raster-coefficients (i.e. the fit parameters) mentioned above using the Minuit package available in ROOT. The following table shows the values of the raster coefficients (the fit–parameters) for a few runs evaluated from the Minuit fitting using the exclusive data. For the 3 GeV runs: run 50808 50815 50833 50855 50894 50924 50937 50938 50951 Xo 4279.4 4500.6 4304.3 4367.7 4269.3 4389.4 4134.3 4041.0 4309.9 Cx 0.00017 0.00013 0.00017 0.00017 0.00017 0.00015 0.00016 0.00015 0.00016 Yo 3026.0 3140.2 2997.6 2859.2 2802.7 2786.3 3186.5 3032.8 2775.1 Cy -0.00018 -0.00018 -0.00018 -0.00017 -0.00017 -0.00017 -0.00019 -0.00018 -0.00018 -Zo 100.77 100.89 100.83 100.78 100.77 100.76 100.79 100.80 100.78 3951.0 -0.00032 4111.8 -0.00032 100.82 101.12 For the 1.3 GeV runs: 51191 51209 4216.4 0.00039 4229.7 0.00030 51230 51252 4246.4 0.00034 4217.8 0.00034 4144.2 -0.00037 4105.8 -0.00032 101.00 100.99 Using the coefficient calculated as above, I plotted the raster-x and raster-y values (in cm) to get the target images for several runs. One such plot for a typical run 50808 is shown below. Exclusive: 50808 The angle correction part is yet to be done. Future Work: Momentum Correction: Why Momentum Correction? Since this experiment is focused on the low momentum transfer behavior of the nucleons, the momentum measurement with great precision and least amount of error is very crucial. But, it is a well known fact that the particle momenta as measured by CLAS and reconstructed with RECSIS show systematic deviations, as evidenced by shifted and broadened invariant mass (W) distributions for inclusive data and missing mass peaks for more exclusive data. In inclusive data, for example, the centroid for the W distribution of the elastic peak is moved from its theoretical value, W = M (the target rest mass) and significantly broader than expected from the intrinsic momentum resolution of CLAS. A clear dependence of the shift on both and can be observed. (15) If the momentum (and other kinematical quantities such as the angles and ) remains uncorrected, our capability to separate signals from background will be affected which will have undesirable effects on the determination of physics quantities. (16) Sources of errors: These systematic momentum deviations could in principle arise from several sources (15): 1) Misalignment of the drift chambers relative to their nominal positions, inaccurate or out-of-date survey results. 2) Neglect to properly incorporate effects like wire sag, wire take-off position on the “trumpet lips”, thermal and stress distortions of the drift chambers, and other factors affecting wire position. 3) Insufficient or incorrect information in the reconstruction code on the exact location of the wire feed-through holes in the drift chamber endplates as actually drilled, especially for the very complicated compound angles involved in the stereo superlayers. 4) Incomplete knowledge of the torus (or mini-torus) magnetic field distribution. A general procedure: In the past, there have been several schemes tried and employed to at least approximately correct for these errors. They make different assumptions depending on the predominant sources of errors that need to be addressed and the level of sophistication embraced. The common approach is to make some basic assumptions about the form of the necessary corrections (which will be either multiplied or added to the measured momenta), with a modest amount of free parameters, and then attempt a fit over a given (usually very large) data set to fix these parameters. Most methods that we are aware of concentrate (or at least start) on elastically scattered electrons and then make assumptions about at least two parameters (e.g., the beam energy and the scattering angle are “known absolutely”) to determine very detailed corrections for electron momenta and/or angles. (15) A more general and comprehensive correction method has been developed at ODU by S. Kuhn and will be employed for EG4. I will adopt the existing code to the specific conditions of EG4 and determine all fit parameters necessary via a Chi-square minimization routine. (3) Conclusion: The main goal of the EG4 experiment is to measure the spin structure function g1, its first moment Γ1 and the GDH integral in the very low momentum transfer regime. This study will give us a glimpse of the nucleon spin structure in this relatively unexplored kinematic regime. As one of many members of the experimental group, I was involved in the EC-timing calibration and Raster correction. EC-timing calibration is now almost done whereas the work on raster correction is underway. After the raster correction part is done, the work on momentum correction will begin immediately. There are following further more tasks to be done, part of which will be done by myself and the rest will be done by others from the EG4 collaboration: background subtraction, final definition of all cuts, beam and target polarization determination, acceptance and efficiency of electron detection in CLAS (via simulation and comparison with known cross sections), radiative corrections, development of models, extraction of g1, integration, neutron information extraction. (3) References: (1) Wikipedia: Standard Model. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Model) (2) S. E. Kuhn, Nucleon Structure Functions: Experiments and Models, HUGS ’97. (3) S. E. Kuhn and G. E. Dodge, Private communications. (4) K. J. Slifer, Ph. D. thesis, Temple University. (5) R. Milner;HERMES physics, a historical perspective (A ppt presentation for HERA symposium June 30, 2007) (6) M. Ripani, Private communication. (7) K.G. Vipuli G. Dharmawardane, Ph.D. thesis, Old Dominion University (8) K.J. Slifer and A. Deur Private communications. (9) M.Battaglieri, et al. 2003 Jefferson Lab proposal E03-006 (10) http://galileo.phys.virginia.edu/classes/sajclub/gdh.html (11) M. Amarian et al., The CLAS forward electromagnetic calorimeter, Nucl. Instr. And Meth. 460 (2000) 239 – 265. (12) P. Bosted et al., Raster Corrections for EG1b, CLAS-NOTE-2003-008. (13) http://www.krl.caltech.edu/~johna/thesis/node19.html (14) R. De Vita, Private communications. (15) A. Klimenko and S. Kuhn, Momentum corrections for E6, CLAS-NOTE-2003-005. (16) K. Park et al., Kinematics Corrections for CLAS, CLAS-NOTE-2003-012. (17) http://people.virginia.edu/~xz5y/Research.html (18) M. Anghinolfi et al., The GDH Sum Rule with Nearly-Real Photons and the Proton g1 Structure Function at Low Momentum Transfer. Jlab PR 03-006. (19) A. Deur, Experimental Studies of Spin Stucture in Light Nuclei, EINN07. (20) J. Zhang, Measurement of Exclusive - Electro-production from the Neutron in the Resonance Region, Oral qualifying exam report, 2006. (21) http://www-meg.phys.cmu.edu/~bellis/dc/dcintro.html (22) http://ikpe1101.ikp.kfa-juelich.de/cosy11/exp/drift_chambers/DriftChambers_E.html (23) W. Brooks, CLAS – A Large Acceptance Spectrometer for Intermediate Energy Electromagnetic Nuclear Physics. (24) B.A. Mecking, et al, The CEBAF large acceptance spectrometer (CLAS), Nucl. Instr. And Meth. A 503 (2003) 513 – 553. (25) http://www.shef.ac.uk/physics/teaching/phy311/scintillator.html (26) Matthieu Guillo et al., EC Time Calibration Procedure For Photon Runs in CLAS, CLAS-NOTE 2001-014, August 20, 2001.