In 1987 the European Muon Collaboration, which had been scattering muons off polarized protons at CERN, shocked the particle physics community with the announcement that little or none of the proton's spin can be attributed to the spins of its three constituent quarks—two “up” quarks and one “down” quark. That report precipitated what became known as “the spin crisis.”
REFERENCES
1.
2.
For a review of the experiments see C. Cavata, V. Hughes, eds., Internal Spin Structure of the Nucleon, World Scientific, Singapore (1995).
3.
4.
L. Galfi, P. Gnadig, J. Kuti, F. Niedermeyer, A. Patkos, in Proc. 15th Intl. Conf. on High‐Energy Physics, Kiev 1970, V. Shelest et al., eds., Naukova Dumka, Kiev (1972).
5.
6.
J.
Ellis
, R.
Jaffe
, 10
, 1669
(1974
).7.
8.
V. Hughes, in Proc. II Intl. Conf. on Polarized Targets, G. Shapiro, ed., U. Calif. P., Berkeley (1971).
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
B.
Adeva
, 329
, 399
(1994
).14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
For a review and references, see A. Manohar, in Symmetry and Spin in the Standard Model, Proc. 7th Lake Louise Winter Inst., B. Campbell et al., eds., World Scientific, Singapore (1992).
20.
HERMES collaboration, “HERMES Technical Design Report,” DESY, Hamburg, July 1993.
21.
22.
23.
This content is only available via PDF.
© 1995 American Institute of Physics.
1995
American Institute of Physics
You do not currently have access to this content.