A small proton charge radius from an electron–proton scattering experiment

W. Xiong, A. Gasparian*, H. Gao, D. Dutta, M. Khandaker, N. Liyanage, E. Pasyuk, C. Peng, X. Bai, L. Ye, K. Gnanvo, C. Gu, M. Levillain, X. Yan, D. W. Higinbotham, M. Meziane, Z. Ye, K. Adhikari, B. Aljawrneh, H. BhattD. Bhetuwal, J. Brock, V. Burkert, C. Carlin, A. Deur, D. Di, J. Dunne, P. Ekanayaka, L. El-Fassi, B. Emmich, L. Gan, O. Glamazdin, M. L. Kabir, A. Karki, C. Keith, S. Kowalski, V. Lagerquist, I. Larin, T. Liu, A. Liyanage, J. Maxwell, D. Meekins, S. J. Nazeer, V. Nelyubin, H. Nguyen, R. Pedroni, C. Perdrisat, J. Pierce, V. Punjabi, M. Shabestari, A. Shahinyan, R. Silwal, S. Stepanyan, A. Subedi, V. V. Tarasov, N. Ton, Y. Zhang, Z. W. Zhao

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

223 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Elastic electron–proton scattering (e–p) and the spectroscopy of hydrogen atoms are the two methods traditionally used to determine the proton charge radius, rp. In 2010, a new method using muonic hydrogen atoms1 found a substantial discrepancy compared with previous results2, which became known as the ‘proton radius puzzle’. Despite experimental and theoretical efforts, the puzzle remains unresolved. In fact, there is a discrepancy between the two most recent spectroscopic measurements conducted on ordinary hydrogen3,4. Here we report on the proton charge radius experiment at Jefferson Laboratory (PRad), a high-precision e–p experiment that was established after the discrepancy was identified. We used a magnetic-spectrometer-free method along with a windowless hydrogen gas target, which overcame several limitations of previous e–p experiments and enabled measurements at very small forward-scattering angles. Our result, rp = 0.831 ± 0.007stat ± 0.012syst femtometres, is smaller than the most recent high-precision e–p measurement5 and 2.7 standard deviations smaller than the average of all e–p experimental results6. The smaller rp we have now measured supports the value found by two previous muonic hydrogen experiments1,7. In addition, our finding agrees with the revised value (announced in 2019) for the Rydberg constant8—one of the most accurately evaluated fundamental constants in physics.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)147-150
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume575
Issue number7781
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Nov 2019
Externally publishedYes

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