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T. Horn

Researcher at University of Maryland, College Park

Publications -  61
Citations -  3320

T. Horn is an academic researcher from University of Maryland, College Park. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nucleon & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 32 publications receiving 2700 citations. Previous affiliations of T. Horn include The Catholic University of America & Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility.

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Electron-Ion Collider: The next QCD frontier: Understanding the glue that binds us all

Alberto Accardi, +83 more
TL;DR: In this article, the science case of an Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), focused on the structure and interactions of gluon-dominated matter, with the intent to articulate it to the broader nuclear science community, is presented.
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Electron Ion Collider: The Next QCD Frontier - Understanding the glue that binds us all

Alberto Accardi, +83 more
TL;DR: The science case of an Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), focused on the structure and interactions of gluon-dominated matter, with the intent to articulate it to the broader nuclear science community was presented in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strange-quark contributions to parity-violating asymmetries in the forward G0 electron-proton scattering experiment

D. S. Armstrong, +113 more
TL;DR: Measurement of parity-violating asymmetries in elastic electron-proton scattering indicate nonzero, Q2 dependent, strange-quark contributions and provide new information beyond that obtained in previous experiments.
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Gluons and the quark sea at high energies: distributions, polarization, tomography

Daniël Boer, +188 more
TL;DR: A ten-week program on "Gluons and the quark sea at high-energies", which took place at the Institute for Nuclear Theory in Seattle in Fall 2010, has been described in this paper, where the principal aim was to develop and sharpen the science case for an Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), a facility that will be able to collide electrons and positrons with polarized protons and with light to heavy nuclei at high energies.