English

Hadronic Parity Violation

Nuclear Theory 2015-06-15 v2 High Energy Physics - Phenomenology Nuclear Experiment

Abstract

The history and phenomenology of hadronic parity nonconservation (PNC) is reviewed. We discuss the current status of the experimental tests and theory. We describe a re-analysis of the asymmetry for polarized proton-proton scattering that, when combined with other experimental constraints and with a recent lattice QCD calculation of the weak pion-nucleon coupling, reveals a much more consistent pattern of PNC couplings. In particular, isoscalar coupling strengths are similar to but somewhat larger than the "best value" estimate of Donoghue, Desplanques, and Holstein, while both lattice QCD and experiment indicate a suppressed parity-nonconserving pion-nucleon coupling. We discuss the relationship between meson-exchange models of hadronic PNC and formulations based on effective theory, stressing their general compatibility as well as the challenge presented to theory by experiment, as several of the most precise measurements involve significant momentum scales. Future directions are proposed.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1303.4132,
  title  = {Hadronic Parity Violation},
  author = {W. C. Haxton and B. R. Holstein},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1303.4132},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

39 pages, 3 figures; typos fixed in this revision

R2 v1 2026-06-21T23:43:27.917Z