Measurement of absorption and charge exchange of $\pi^+$ on carbon

The DUET collaboration Ieki, K. ; Pinzon Guerra, E.S. ; Berkman, S. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.C 92 (2015) 035205, 2015.
Inspire Record 1377940 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.73770

The combined cross section for absorption and charge exchange interactions of positively charged pions with carbon nuclei for the momentum range 200 MeV/c to 300 MeV/c have been measured with the DUET experiment at TRIUMF. The uncertainty is reduced by nearly half compared to previous experiments. This result will be a valuable input to existing models to constrain pion interactions with nuclei.

1 data table

Summary of the measurements. In this table, $p_\pi$ is the momentum of pions at the fiber tracker.


The compact emulsion spectrometer.

Buontempo, S. ; Camilleri, L. ; Catanesi, M.G. ; et al.
Nucl.Instrum.Meth.A 457 (2001) 464-470, 2001.
Inspire Record 531752 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.49938

An emulsion spectrometer has been built and tested with pion beams in a 0.7 T magnetic field. A momentum resolution, Δ P / P =13%±1%, has been obtained for 5 and 10 GeV /c particles.

2 data tables

No description provided.

No description provided.


A measurement of the energy loss spectrum of 150-GeV muons in iron.

The RD34 collaboration Berger, Edmond L. ; Blair, R. ; Dawson, J. ; et al.
Z.Phys.C 73 (1997) 455-463, 1997.
Inspire Record 425292 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.47726

The energy loss spectrum of 150 GeV muons has been measured with a prototype of the ATLAS hadron calorimeter in the H8 beam of the CERN SPS. The differential probability dP/dv per radiation length of a fractional energy loss v = ΔEμ/Eμ has been measured in the range v = 0.01 ÷ 0.95; it is compared with the theoretical predictions for energy losses due to bremsstrahlung and production of electron—positron pairs or of energetic knock-on electrons. The integrated probability \(\int_{0.01}^{0.95}({\rm d}P/{\rm d}v){\rm d}v\) is (1.610 ± 0.015stat ± 0.105syst) · 10−3 in agreement with the theoretical predictions 1.556 · 10−3 and 1.619 · 10−3. Agreement with theory is also found in two intervals of v where production of electron-positron pairs and knock-on electrons dominates. In the region of bremsstrahlung dominance (v = 0.12 ÷ 0.95) the measured integrated probability (1.160 ± 0.040stat ± 0.075syst) · 10−4 is in agreement with the theoretical value of 1.185 · 10−4, obtained using the Petrukhin and Shestakov description of the bremsstrahlung process. The same result is about 3.6 standard deviations (defined as the quadratic sum of statistical and systematic errors) lower than the theoretical prediction of 1.472 · 10−4, obtained using Tsai’s description of bremsstrahlung.

2 data tables

Measured differential probability values DPROB/DNU for fractional energy loss. Only statistical errors are given.

Integrated probability (DELTA(PROB)) per radiation length.


ATOMIC PARITY VIOLATION MEASUREMENTS IN THE HIGHLY FORBIDDEN (6)S(1/2) - (7)S(1/2) CESIUM TRANSITION. 3. DATA ACQUISITION AND PROCESSING. RESULTS AND IMPLICATIONS

Bouchiat, M.A. ; Guena, J. ; Pottier, L. ; et al.
J.Phys.(France) 47 (1986) 1709-1730, 1986.
Inspire Record 232798 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.38588

This paper completes the detailed presentation of our PV experiment on the 6S1/2 - 7S1/2 transition in Cs. A detailed description of the data acquisition and processing is given. The results of two independent measurements made on ΔF = 0 and ΔF =1 hfs components agree, providing an important cross-check. After a complete reanalysis of systematics and calibration, the precision is slightly improved, leading to the weighted average Im Epv 1/β = - 1.52 ± 0.18 mV/cm. Later results from an independent group agree quite well. With the semi-empirical value β = (26.8 ± 0.8) a30, our result yields Epv1 = (- 0.79 ± 0.10) x 10-11 i |e|a0. Coupled with the atomic calculations, this implies that the weak nuclear charge of Cs is Qw = -68 ± 9. This value agrees with the standard electroweak theory and leads to a weak interaction angle sin2 θ W = 0.21 ± 0.04. The complementarity of these measurements with high energy experiments is illustrated.

3 data tables

Revision of the earlier experiment PL 117B, 358. (7s)2S1/2:F=4 --> (6s)2S1/2:F=4 transition.

Revision of the earlier experiment PL 134B, 463. (7s)2S1/2:F=3 --> (6s)2S1/2:F=4 transition.

Combined of the two above measurements following the philosophy: quadratic sum of the statistical and systematic uncertainties and weighting each result by the squared reciprocal of that uncertainty. (7s)2S1/2 --> (6s)2S1/2 transitions.