Abstract

Electromagnetic form factors are fundamental quantities describing the internal structure of hadrons. They can be measured with scattering processes in the space-like region and annihilation processes in the time-like region. The two regions are connected by crossing symmetry. The measurements of the proton electromagnetic form factors in the time-like region using the initial state radiation technique are reviewed. Recent experimental studies have shown that initial state radiation processes at high luminosity electron-positron colliders can be effectively used to probe the electromagnetic structure of hadrons. The BABAR experiment at the B-factory PEP-II in Stanford and the BESIII experiment at BEPCII (an electron positron collider in the τ-charm mass region) in Beijing have measured the time-like form factors of the proton using the initial state radiation process e+e−→pp¯γ. The two kinematical regions where the photon is emitted from the initial state at small and large polar angles have been investigated. In the first case, the photon is in the region not covered by the detector acceptance and is not detected. The Born cross section and the proton effective form factor have been measured over a wide and continuous range of the the momentum transfer squared q2 from the threshold up to 42 (GeV/c)2. The ratio of electric and magnetic form factors of the proton has been also determined. In this report, the theoretical aspect and the experimental studies of the initial state radiation process e+e−→pp¯γ are described. The measurements of the Born cross section and the proton form factors obtained in these analyses near the threshold region and in the relatively large q2 region are examined. The experimental results are compared to the predictions from theory and models. Their impact on our understanding of the nucleon structure is discussed.

Highlights

  • The concept of symmetry plays a key role in the understanding of the fundamental building blocks of the universe and the forces binding them

  • We describe the initial state radiation (ISR) analyses for the proton electromagnetic form factors (EMFFs) measurements at BABAR and BESIII experiments

  • Experimental Results of Proton form Factors from ISR Process The proton EMFFs have been measured through the ISR technique at BABAR and BESIII experiments, with both SA- and LA-ISR photon kinematic ranges

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of symmetry plays a key role in the understanding of the fundamental building blocks of the universe and the forces binding them. Experiments employing antimatter, a mirror or a counterpart of a subatomic particle with opposite charge and right- or left-handed spin, provide important information about the elementary units of which the universe is composed. Assuming the exchange of a virtual photon of positive momentum transfer squared, q2, between the initial and the final states, these processes contain direct information about the electromagnetic form factors (EMFFs) in the time-like region. In the space-like region (q2 < 0), EMFFs can be accessed experimentally for stable bayrons through the elastic scattering experiments between electron and baryons. Crossing symmetry, which holds at the tree level, states that the same amplitude describes the crossed processes, which occur in different kinematical regions, and connect the time-like with the space-like EMFFs. Space-like EMFFs provide information about the distributions of the charge and magnetic current densities

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