Workshop: Electron-Nuclei Interaction at EIC

US/Eastern
Hybrid

Hybrid

Description

CFNS workshop: Electron-Nuclei Interaction at EIC, will take place at CFNS in Stony Brook University on 5th-7th July 2023. The workshop is held in hybrid mode (in-person and online).

The objectives of the workshop are the following:
1. Summarize and hold discussions on the electron-nuclei studies related to EIC. Underline the challenges of each study.  The workshop discussion focuses on but is not limited to electron-light Nuclei studies.
2. Encourage further studies on the subject in both experiment and theory.
3. Initiate conversations between the accelerator and physics communities to establish realistic parametrizations of nuclei beams.

If you are interested in presenting your work at the meeting please contact the organizing committee.

Zoom link here

This event is part of the CFNS workshop/ad-hoc meeting series. See the CFNS conferences page for other events.
Participants
  • Abhay Deshpande
  • Adam Freese
  • Alexander Jentsch
  • Ankan Banerjee
  • Anna Kowalewska
  • Axel Schmidt
  • Bailing Ma
  • Bernd Surrow
  • Bjoern Schenke
  • Chao Peng
  • Christian Weiss
  • Christoph Montag
  • Darren Upton
  • Deepa Thomas
  • Dennis Perepelitsa
  • Douglas Higinbotham
  • Eli Piasetzky
  • Fredrick Olness
  • Gerald Miller
  • Gian Michele Innocenti
  • Haixin Huang
  • Hamlet Mkrtchyan
  • Henry Klest
  • Holly Szumila-Vance
  • Igor Korover
  • Jennifer Rittenhouse West
  • Jia Jiangyong
  • Joao Pacheco de Melo
  • Kenneth Barish
  • Kiel Hock
  • Kolja Kauder
  • kossi Attitchou
  • Lawrence Weinstein
  • Lucas Ehinger
  • Mark Baker
  • Michael Pitt
  • Mohammad Hattawy
  • Niseem (Magdy) Abdelrahman
  • Pawel Nadel-Turonski
  • Peter Steinberg
  • Prithwish Tribedy
  • Rajeev Singh
  • Ranjeet Dalal
  • Raphael Dupre
  • Rohit Kaundal
  • Rosario Turrisi
  • Sayak Chatterjee
  • Sebastian E. Kuhn
  • Shaswat Tiwari
  • Shujie Li
  • Souvik Paul
  • Stanley Brodsky
  • Swagatam Tah
  • Tim Kolar
  • Tolga Erbora
  • Ulrich Mosel
  • Wenbin Zhao
  • Wenliang Li
  • Yevheniia Khyzhniak
  • Zhi Hu
  • Thursday, 6 July
    • 08:40 09:00
      Welcome 20m
      Speakers: Abhay Deshpande (Stony Brook University & BNL), Or Hen (MIT)
    • 09:00 10:40
      Accelerator Session: Project and Accelerator Insights
    • 10:40 11:00
      Coffee and Question to the accelerator experts 20m
    • 11:00 12:15
      Physics Session: Physics
    • 14:00 15:20
      Physics Session: Physics session 2
    • 15:20 16:00
      Coffee 40m
    • 16:00 17:15
      Physics Session: Physics session 3
      • 16:00
        Tagged DIS: Bound Nucleons 25m
        Speaker: Alexander Jentsch (Brookhaven National Laboratory)
      • 16:25
        SRC Nucleon Structure: From JLab to EIC 25m
        Speaker: Or Hen (MIT)
      • 16:50
        eA study Group Introduction and Status 25m
        Speaker: Zhoudunming Tu (BNL)
    • 18:00 19:10
      Group Dinner 1h 10m
    • 19:10 19:55
    • 09:00 10:15
      Physics Session: Physics Session 2
    • 10:15 10:50
      Coffee 35m
    • 10:50 12:10
      Physics Session: Physics Session 3
      • 10:55
        Open questions in nuclear ppdfs from x-^3 to x =1 25m
        Speaker: Mark Strikman (Penn State University)
      • 11:20
        Nuclear deformation 25m
        Speaker: Bjoern Schenke (BNL)
      • 11:45
        EMC Theory: diquark system 25m
        Speaker: Jennifer Rittenhouse West (LBNL)
    • 14:00 15:15
      Physics Session: Physics 4
      • 14:00
        Energy and momentum densities in hadrons 25m
        Speaker: Adam Freese (Jefferson Lab)
      • 14:25
        Color Transparency, Intrinsic Charm, Hidden Color, based on Light-Front Holography 25m
        Speaker: Stan Brodsky (SLAC)
      • 14:50
        Spin Precession of Polarized Beams at NIKHEF, JLab and the EIC 25m

        I will go through the basics of spin precession in storage rings and for fixed target facilities from an experimental physicists point of view. The goal to leave the audience with a basic understanding of "magic energies", "siberian snakes" and why polarized deuterons are much harder to manipulate then protons and 3he.

        Speaker: Douglas Higinbotham (Jefferson Lab)
    • 15:15 15:35
      Coffee 20m
    • 15:35 16:35
      Discussion
    • 16:35 16:40
      Close out 5m
    • 16:40 17:25