Nucleon Transverse Structure at COMPASS
Nour Makke

TL;DR
This paper reports on measurements of the transverse spin and momentum structure of the nucleon using SIDIS data from the COMPASS experiment at CERN, focusing on azimuthal asymmetries with transversely polarized proton targets.
Contribution
It presents recent experimental results on azimuthal asymmetries, providing new insights into the nucleon's transverse structure using polarized target data.
Findings
Observation of azimuthal asymmetries in SIDIS data
Insights into the transverse spin distribution of nucleons
Data supports models of nucleon transverse structure
Abstract
COMPASS is a fixed target experiment at CERN. Part of its physics programme is dedicated to study the transverse spin and the transverse momentum structure of the nucleon using SIDIS. For these measurements, data have been collected using transversely polarised proton and deuteron targets. A selection of recent measurements of azimuthal asymmetries using data collected with transversely polarised protons is presented.
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Superconducting Materials and Applications · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
