[Frost] aps abstract
Eugene Pasyuk
pasyuk at jlab.org
Thu Jan 3 10:05:45 EST 2013
Natalie,
The structure is a bit out of logical order. Motivation should go first and you have it in the middle. I would change it to something like this:
Polarization observables can help to provide an understanding of the baryon resonance spectrum,
including disentangling overlapping resonances or the evidence of missing resonance
states. Recently, double-polarization data was taken at the Thomas Jefferson National
Accelerator Facility (JLab) using tagged circularly polarized photons incident on a transversely
polarized frozen spin target (FROST) comprising butanol, operated at the low
temperature of 30mK. The reaction products are being detected in the CEBAF Large
Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) of Hall B. We will present preliminary data of the T and F asymmetries of the KΛ final state with comparisons to theoretical predictions. There are very few published measurements
of the T asymmetry and none of the F asymmetry for the KΛ channel. This work is the
first of its kind and can significantly add to the world database and our understanding of nucleon resonance spectrum.
-Eugene
----- Original Message -----
> From: natalie at jlab.org
> To: frost at jlab.org
> Sent: Thursday, January 3, 2013 9:54:32 AM
> Subject: [Frost] aps abstract
>
> Hi,
> I would like to present g9b results of KLambda at the APS meeting
> this
> April. Please take a look at my abstract before I send it to the
> hadron
> group.
>
> Thanks,
> Natalie
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