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Probing the Quark Structure of Matter

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Hadrons and Hadronic Matter

Part of the book series: NATO ASI Series ((NSSB,volume 228))

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Abstract

Perhaps the most profound question in nuclear physics is the extent to which the internal structure of the nucleón matters in microscopic calculations of phenomena such as the N-N force, nuclear binding energies and densities and the response of nuclei to weak and electromagnetic probes. In answering it we would forge a long needed link between high energy and nuclear physics. My own interest in the problem is over a decade old, beginning with naive considerations of size based on the MIT bag model and its chiral extensions, notably the cloudy bag model. From such a beginning it is possible to take two divergent paths. The first is to ask what constraints more elementary, phenomenological considerations can put on the structure of the nucleón and therefore on the existing QCD-motivated models. The second is to ask how the consequences of different models might vary for the phenomena mentioned.

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© 1990 Plenum Press, New York

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Thomas, A.W. (1990). Probing the Quark Structure of Matter. In: Vautherin, D., Lenz, F., Negele, J.W. (eds) Hadrons and Hadronic Matter. NATO ASI Series, vol 228. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4684-1336-6_9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4684-1336-6_9

  • Publisher Name: Springer, Boston, MA

  • Print ISBN: 978-1-4684-1338-0

  • Online ISBN: 978-1-4684-1336-6

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