|    The structure of the proton is under the  microscope at the U.S. Department of Energy's Thomas Jefferson National  Accelerator Facility (Jefferson Lab) in Newport News, Virginia, where a  series of experiments continues to produce unexpected results.   Simple theories of proton structure say  that the way electric charge is distributed in the proton is the same as the  magnetization distribution. But Jefferson Lab results indicate these distributions  are definitely different.    A fundamental goal of nuclear physics is  to understand the structure and behavior of strongly interacting matter in  terms of its building blocks, quarks and gluons. An important step toward  this goal is a description of the internal structure for the proton and  neutron, collectively known as nucleons. Jefferson Lab was built, in part, to  study the physics of quarks and gluons and their connection to larger  composite objects like protons.    The proton is the positively charged core  of the hydrogen atom, the most abundant element in the universe. It is made  up of three charged quarks and the gluons that bind them together. The quarks  move around, so the proton has a charge distributed over its size. This leads  to the generation of an electric current, which in turn induces a magnetic  field. In addition, quarks and gluons both have spin, leading to a magnetic  moment. The combination of the total magnetic field and the magnetic moment  is a quantity called magnetization.    Jefferson Lab is uniquely positioned to  measure the proton's electric charge and magnetization distributions, the  so-called electromagnetic form factors that describe its internal structure.    In two recent Jefferson Lab experiments,  researchers directed the accelerator's polarized electron beam toward liquid  hydrogen cooled to 17 Kelvin (–429°F). Each electron in the beam has an  intrinsic angular momentum, or spin. The beam of electrons is said to be  "polarized" if their spins point — on average — in a specific  direction. As an electron collided with a proton in the hydrogen target, the  proton recoiled, becoming polarized during the interaction. The scattered  electron and recoiling proton were then detected in two high-resolution  spectrometers (HRS), and the proton polarization was measured by a specially  developed detector called a proton polarimeter.    From these measurements, the researchers  could obtain a ratio of electric charge distribution to magnetization  distribution — the electric and magnetic form factors — at various depths  inside the proton. Their experiments revealed unexpected and significantly  different energy-dependence for the form factors. The data showed that the  proton's charge distribution is not the same as its magnetization  distribution; the charge distribution is more spread out than the  magnetization.    These results are very interesting to  both experimental and theoretical physicists. The Jefferson Lab data has  already had an impact on theoretical models, helping rule out some models,  directing others toward a better description of internal proton structure.    One such model was developed in 1996 by  physicists Gerald A. Miller and Michael R. Frank, both from the University of  Washington in Seattle, and Byron K. Jennings from TRIUMF in Vancouver. The  researchers predicted a fall-off in the ratio of the electromagnetic form  factors but, at the time, they didn't realize that experimental confirmation  was possible. When the results of the first Jefferson Lab experiments probing  proton structure were announced in 2000, the prediction was confirmed.    An interesting by-product of Miller's  theory is that the proton is not necessarily spherical in shape. Depending on  the angular momentum of the quarks, the proton could be spherical in shape or  more like a doughnut, a pretzel or a peanut. Miller says the variety of  shapes is nearly limitless, and depends on the momentum of the quarks and the  angle between the spin of the quark and the spin of the proton.    |