For nearly three decades, physicists have been unable to answer a seemingly simple question: where does proton spin come from?

Summing the spins of the three that make up the seems, in principle, straightforward, however, have been faced with a particularly stubborn imbalance. In 1988 the European Muon Collaboration (EMC) at CERN shocked the physics community by announcing that the sum of the spins of the three quarks that make up the proton is much less than the of the proton itself. This discovery questioned the fundamental idea in physics that the amount of any physical quantity on one side of an equation must equal that on the other side.

EMC researchers discovered that the net spin of the three quarks actually accounted for no more than 24% of the proton's spin and may even contribute as little as 4% – in other words, practically none.

This discovery sparked the beginning of the "spin crisis". Gerhard Mallot, a senior physicist at CERN, recalls how nervous people were and how there were conjectures that the experiment was flawed or even that the underlying theory, known as quantum chromodynamics (QCD), might not be correct.

Further scattering experiments at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), CERN and the DESY laboratory in Germany eventually confirmed that quark spin contributes 30% (+/-5%) of the total , but that still leaves 65–70% unaccounted for.

In the June 2015 issue of Physics World, science writer Edwin Cartlidge describes how researchers have since devoted their energy to finding alternative possible sources of the proton spin, such as the momenta that quarks and gluons – particles that mediate the strong nuclear force by bonding together quarks of various types – acquire as they rotate around the proton's spin axis, or perhaps the spin of the gluons themselves.

The hot debate between theorists is just how much each of these components contributes to the overall proton spin, and the latest round of data from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island in New York suggests that gluon spin may be the chief culprit.

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