Measurement of the pi- p elastic scattering cross-section near 180 degrees between 600 and 1280 mev/c

Richards, T.J. ; Crabb, D.G. ; Keller, R. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 10 (1974) 45-64, 1974.
Inspire Record 95569 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.4929

Differential cross sections for π−p elastic scattering over the angular range 155° to 177° in the center-of-mass system have been measured at 33 incident pion momenta in the range 600 to 1280 MeV/c. The experiment, which was performed at the Bevatron at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, employed a liquid hydrogen target, a double-arm spectrometer, and standard counter techniques to detect the elastic events. The data from this experiment are compared to all other published data in this momentum region. The over-all agreement is good. The data of this experiment are also compared with the results of the recent phase-shift analysis by Almehed and Lovelace. In the momentum region between 700 and 900 MeV/c, the slope of the backward angular distribution goes rapidly through zero from negative to positive, and the magnitude of the differential cross section falls by more than a factor of 10. Momentum-dependent structure is seen in the extrapolated differential cross sections at 180°. Two prominent dips in the 180° differential cross sections appear at 880 and 1150 MeV/c. This structure is discussed in terms of a direct-channel resonance model that assumes only resonant partial waves are contributing to the cross sections for large scattering angles.

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Pi- p elastic scattering near 180 degrees between 600 and 1280 mev/c

Crabb, D.G. ; Keller, R. ; O' Fallon, J.R. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.Lett. 27 (1971) 216-219, 1971.
Inspire Record 68952 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.21460

The differential cross sections for π−p elastic scattering over the angular range 155° to 177° in the center of mass have been measured at 33 incident-pion momenta in the range 600 to 1280 MeV/c. Angular distributions are presented. The extrapolated differential cross sections at 180° show considerable structure, in particular a dip near 1150 MeV/c. In general the near-180° cross sections do not agree with existing phase shift solutions above 1000 MeV/c

1 data table match query

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