Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Preface to the First Edition
- 1 The Atom Completed and a New Particle
- 2 The Muon and the Pion
- 3 Strangeness
- 4 Antibaryons
- 5 The Resonances
- 6 Weak Interactions
- 7 The Neutral Kaon System
- 8 The Structure of the Nucleon
- 9 The J/ψ, the τ, and Charm
- 10 Quarks, Gluons, and Jets
- 11 The Fifth Quark
- 12 From Neutral Currents to Weak Vector Bosons
- 13 Testing the Standard Model
- 14 The Top Quark
- 15 Mixing and CP Violation in Heavy Quark Mesons
- 16 Neutrino Masses and Oscillations
- 17 Epilogue
- Index
8 - The Structure of the Nucleon
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Preface to the First Edition
- 1 The Atom Completed and a New Particle
- 2 The Muon and the Pion
- 3 Strangeness
- 4 Antibaryons
- 5 The Resonances
- 6 Weak Interactions
- 7 The Neutral Kaon System
- 8 The Structure of the Nucleon
- 9 The J/ψ, the τ, and Charm
- 10 Quarks, Gluons, and Jets
- 11 The Fifth Quark
- 12 From Neutral Currents to Weak Vector Bosons
- 13 Testing the Standard Model
- 14 The Top Quark
- 15 Mixing and CP Violation in Heavy Quark Mesons
- 16 Neutrino Masses and Oscillations
- 17 Epilogue
- Index
Summary
Elastic and deep inelastic scattering from nucleons, 1956–1973.
Hadronic scattering experiments produced extensive and rich data revealing resonances and regularities of cross sections. While the quark model provided a firm basis for classifying the particles and resonances, the scattering cross sections were less easily interpreted. The early studies of strong interactions indicated that the couplings of the particles were large. This precluded the straightforward use of perturbation theory. While alternative approaches have yielded some important results, it is still true that even processes as basic as elastic proton–proton scattering are beyond our ability to explain in detail. In contradistinction, scattering of electrons by protons and neutrons is open to direct interpretation.
For the scattering of an electron by a proton it is a good approximation to assume that the interaction is due to the exchange of a single virtual photon. The small corrections to this approximation may be calculated if necessary. Each coupling of the photon gives a factor of e in the scattering amplitude, so a virtual photon's two couplings typically provides a factor α = e2/4π ≈ 1/137. It is this small number that makes the approximation a good one.
The scattering of relativistic electrons (E > > me) by a known charge distribution can be calculated using the standard methods of quantum mechanics.
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- The Experimental Foundations of Particle Physics , pp. 209 - 246Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009