2006 Division of Nuclear Physics Annual Meeting
Wednesday–Saturday, October 25–28, 2006;
Nashville, Tennessee
Session GA: Topics In Nuclear Physics
9:00 AM–11:24 AM,
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Gaylord Opryland
Room: Tennessee C
Sponsoring
Unit:
DNP
Chair: Richard Milner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.DNP.GA.2
Abstract: GA.00002 : First Physics Results from the MuCap Experiment at PSI*
9:36 AM–10:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Peter Kammel
(University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
The MuCap experiment will measure the rate of the muon capture
reaction $\mu
$ + p $\to $ n + $\nu $ on the free proton to 1{\%} precision.
This directly
determines the pseudoscalar form factor g$_{P }$at q$^{2}$ =
-0.88 m$_{\mu}^{2}$ to 7{\%}. The pseudoscalar is the least
well-known of the
basic nucleon form factors characterizing the structure of its
charged
electro weak current. Modern effective theories based on the
chiral symmetry
of QCD and its breaking can calculate g$_{P}$ to 3{\%}. In spite
of efforts
spanning the last 30 years, experimental results are still
controversial and
subject to large uncertainties in their interpretation. While the
first
radiative muon capture experiment on hydrogen recently observed a
four
standard deviation discrepancy from the precise chiral
prediction, new
results on muonic atomic physics processes in hydrogen underscore
the model
dependence of the present g$_{P}$ determinations. The resulting
uncertainty
in g$_{P}$ is as large as 50 percent.
The MuCap experiment is designed to overcome the problems that
plagued
earlier efforts. The method requires a combination of novel and
challenging
detector techniques. The capture rate will be determined from the
difference
of the $\mu ^{+}$ and $\mu ^{-}$ lifetimes measured after muons are
stopped in a time projection chamber operating with 10 bar
hydrogen gas.
Electrons from muon decay are reconstructed with an electron
tracking
system. A sophisticated gas system maintains and monitors the
ultra-high
purity of the deuterium-depleted H$_{2}$ gas used as an active
target. In
2004 the hardware for the complex detector was commissioned and
20{\%} of
our final statistics was recorded. After additional performance
upgrades in
2005, the experiment successfully reached the proposed goal of
10$^{10}$
events in 2006.
The 2004 data analysis is at an advanced stage. The data surpass all
previous experiments both in statistics and in reduction of
systematic
uncertainties. First results on the $\mu $p capture rate will be
presented
at this conference.
As a possible second stage, we are exploring a precision
measurement of the
related muon capture reaction on deuterium. A measurement at the
1{\%} level
could be compared with recent high-precision calculations,
provide direct
information on the two-nucleon axial current and calibrate
fundamental
neutrino reactions.
*Supported by NSF, DOE, CRDF, PSI and Russian Academy of Sciences
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.DNP.GA.2