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Differential cross sections and photon beam asymmetries of $\eta$ photoproduction on the proton at $E_\gamma$ = 1.3-2.4 GeV

Authors :
Hashimoto, T.
Nam, T.
Muramatsu, N.
Ahn, J. K.
Chang, W. C.
Chen, J. Y.
Chu, M. L.
Date, S.
Gogami, T.
Goto, H.
Hamano, H.
He, Q. H.
Hicks, K.
Hiraiwa, T.
Honda, Y.
Hotta, T.
Ikuno, H.
Inoue, Y.
Ishikawa, T.
Jaegle, I.
Jo, J. M.
Kasamatsu, Y.
Katsuragawa, H.
Kido, S.
Kon, Y.
Matsumoto, S.
Matsumura, Y.
Miyabe, M.
Mizutani, K.
Nakamura, T.
Nakano, T.
Niiyama, M.
Nozawa, Y.
Ohashi, Y.
Ohnishi, H.
Ohta, T.
Ozawa, K.
Rangacharyulu, C.
Ryu, S. Y.
Sada, Y.
Shibukawa, T.
Shimizu, H.
Shirai, R.
Shiraishi, K.
Strokovsky, E. A.
Sugaya, Y.
Sumihama, M.
Suzuki, S.
Tanaka, S.
Taniguchi, Y.
Tokiyasu, A.
Tomida, N.
Tsuchikawa, Y.
Ueda, T.
Yamazaki, H.
Yamazaki, R.
Yanai, Y.
Yorita, T.
Yoshida, C.
Yosoi, M.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We have carried out exclusive measurements for the photoproduction of an $\eta$ meson from a proton target with an egg-shaped calorimeter made of BGO crystals (BGOegg) and forward charged-particle detectors at the SPring-8 LEPS2 beamline. The differential cross sections and photon beam asymmetries of the $\gamma p \to \eta p$ reaction are measured in a center-of-mass energy ($W$) range of $1.82$-$2.32$ GeV and a polar angle range of $-1.0 < \cos{\theta^{\eta}_{\mathrm{c.m.}}} < 0.6$. The reaction is identified by selecting a proton and two $\gamma$'s produced by an $\eta$-meson decay. The kinematic fit method was employed to select the reaction candidate with the confidence level larger than $1$\%. A bump structure at $W$ = $2.0$-$2.3$ GeV in the differential cross section is confirmed at extremely backward $\eta$ polar angles, where the existing data are inconsistent with each other. This bump structure is likely associated with high-spin resonances that couple with $s\bar{s}$ quarks. The results of the photon beam asymmetries in a wide $\eta$ polar angle range are new for the photon beam energies exceeding $2.1$ GeV. These results are not reproduced by the existing partial wave analyses. They provide an additional constraint to nucleon resonance studies at high energies.<br />Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures

Subjects

Subjects :
Nuclear Experiment

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2202.13688
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.106.035201