Exclusive and restricted-inclusive reactions involving the $^{11}$Be one-neutron halo

Anne, R. ; Bimbot, R. ; Dogny, S. ; et al.
Nucl.Phys.A 575 (1994) 125-154, 1994.
Inspire Record 1389767 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.36536

Reactions of a 41 MeV/u beam of the radioactive halo nucleus 11Be have been studied with a counter telescope coupled to an array of neutron detectors covering angles up to 97°. The technique allows to determine single-neutron inclusive and exclusive angular distributions. The targets (Be, Ti and Au) were chosen to illustrate the relative roles played by nuclear and Coulomb mechanisms. The channels leading to 10Be, the dissociation channels, correspond to impact parameters larger than the sum of the radii of the target and the 10Be core. It is shown that for the dissociation process it is possible to account almost quantitatively for the integral, single- and double-differential cross sections from models without free parameters including the Coulomb, Serber and Glauber (diffraction-dissociation) mechanisms. The neutron distributions from the nondissociative reaction channels show little individuality and it is convenient to group them together as the channel “neutron plus anything different from 10Be”. We refer to these as “restricted-inclusive” reactions. These seem to be a promising tool for obtaining accurate information on the halo wave function in momentum coordinates.

3 data tables

INTEGRAL SIGMA(BE10) FOLLOWING PROJECTILE BREAKUP.

No description provided.

IN THE REACTION X IS NOT BE10.


Global transverse energy distributions in relativistic nuclear collisions at 14.6-A/GeV/c

The E-802 collaboration Abbott, T. ; Akiba, Y. ; Alburger, D. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.C 45 (1992) 2933-2951, 1992.
Inspire Record 334801 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.26106

A systematic set of measurements of the global transverse energy distributions, dσ/dET and dET/dη, from beams of protons, O16 and Si28 at 14.6A GeV/c, incident on targets ranging from Be to Au is presented. The detector was a semicircular array of lead-glass blocks, covering polar angles 9°<θ<32°, whose total response provides a good measure of the produced particle yield in the central rapidity region of these reactions. Proton-nucleus spectra exhibit a similar shape on the high-energy tail, independent of target, suggesting that produced particles in such events arise mostly from the first collision of the projectile proton. For targets heavier than Cu, the high-energy edges of the oxygen-nucleus spectra, and of the silicon-nucleus spectra, reach ratios consistent with the geometry of central collisions. Angular distributions, dET/dη, are characterized by Gaussian fits, and an acceptance-independent form of the differential cross section is found, based on the maximum value of dET/dη. The projectile dependence of nucleus-nucleus spectra is studied in terms of two very different models: simple energy scaling and the wounded projectile nucleon model of p+A convolutions.

13 data tables

No description provided.

No description provided.

No description provided.

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