Objective
Electromagnetic Interactions with Nucleons and Nuclei are an important tool to study the structure and the strong interaction of extended hadronic systems. It is the aim of the proposed conference series to provide a forum for a community which originally was separated into three groups:
- nuclear physicists, who traditionally were used to argue in terms of nucleons and mesons as basic building blocks of matter and meson exchange as origin of the nuclear force;
- 'medium energy' particle physicists, who study mainly ground state properties of hadrons and the spectrum of their excited states in terms of 'constituent' quarks, and;
- 'high energy' particle physicists who deal with quark and gluon degrees of freedom in the regime where the strong force can be described perturbatively by the underlying field theory -Quantum Chromo Dynamics (QCD).
The ultimate goal of today's hadronic physics with electromagnetic probes is to understand the strong interaction in the transition region where quarks and gluons become 'confined' into the observed subnuclear particles and where perturbative methods no longer work. This calls for a coherent effort and essentially a merging of the three groups and also tight collaborations between experimentalists and theorists.
A strong and active community is performing experiments at various European Facilities as well as leading collaborations at Facilities in North America. Many second-generation experiments have been started which in the coming years will produce high statistics data of unprecedented quality. Also on the theoretical side there are recent promising developments which are hoped to help clarifying the physics of confinement.
The present programmes at the different facilities cover at least the next five years, upgrades are being discussed. Therefore it is appropriate to plan two events, which each concentrates on the highlights from the two preceding years.
ftp://ftp.cordis.lu/pub/improving/docs/HPCF-2000-00157-1.pdf(opens in new window)
Fields of science (EuroSciVoc)
CORDIS classifies projects with EuroSciVoc, a multilingual taxonomy of fields of science, through a semi-automatic process based on NLP techniques. See: The European Science Vocabulary.
CORDIS classifies projects with EuroSciVoc, a multilingual taxonomy of fields of science, through a semi-automatic process based on NLP techniques. See: The European Science Vocabulary.
- natural sciences physical sciences theoretical physics particle physics gluons
- natural sciences physical sciences theoretical physics particle physics quarks
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Coordinator
Greece
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