Date

Nuclear Cross Sections for 1.4-Bev Neutrons

Coor, T. ; Hill, D.A. ; Hornyak, W.F. ; et al.
Phys.Rev. 98 (1955) 1369-1386, 1955.
Inspire Record 46644 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.248

Transmission measurements in good and poor geometry have been performed at the Brookhaven Cosmotron to measure the total and absorption cross sections of several nuclei for neutrons in the Bev energy range. The neutrons are produced by bombarding a Be target with 2.2-Bev protons. The neutron detector requires the incident particle to pass an anticoincidence counter and produce in an aluminum radiator a charged particle that will traverse a fourfold scintillation telescope containing 6 in. of lead. Contribution of neutrons below 800 Mev are believed small. The angular distribution of neutrons from the target is sharply peaked forward with a half-width of 6°. The integral angular distributions of diffraction scattered neutrons from C, Cu, and Pb are measured by varying the detector geometry. The angular half-width of these distributions indicates a mean effective neutron energy of 1.4±0.2 Bev. The total cross sections σH and σD−σH are measured by attenuation differences in good geometry of CH2-C and D2O-H2O, with the result: σH=42.4±1.8 mb, σD−σH=42.2±1.8 mb. The cross sections of eight elements from Be to U are measured in good and poor geometry, and the following values of the total and absorption cross sections are deduced (in units of millibrans): Experimental errors are about 3 percent in σtotal and 5 percent in σabsorption. An interpretation of these cross sections is given in terms of optical model parameters for two extreme nuclear density distributions: uniform (radius R) and Gaussian [ρ=ρ0exp−(ra)2]. The absorption cross-section data are well fitted with R=1.28A13 or a=0.32+0.62A13 in units of 10−13 cm. A nuclear density distribution intermediate between uniform and Gaussian will make the present results consistent with the recent electromagnetic radii.

2 data tables

'ALL'.

No description provided.


Observation of Resonance in the $K^{0}_{1}K^{0}_{1}$ System

Beusch, W. ; Fischer, W.E. ; Gobbi, B. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 25 (1967) 357-361, 1967.
Inspire Record 52538 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.29450

We have analyzed 2560 events in the final-state K O 1 K O 1 n produced in π − p interactions at 5, 7 and 12 GeV/ c . We observe the S ∗ (1070), f O and A 2 decaying into K O 1 K O 1 . Resonance parameters, cross sections, and branching ratios are given.

1 data table

Cross section times branching ratio.


Single and Multiple Pion Production in pi+n and pi-p Interactions at 1.7 GeV/c

Bacon, T.C. ; Fickinger, W.J. ; Hill, D.G. ; et al.
Phys.Rev. 157 (1967) 1263-1278, 1967.
Inspire Record 52416 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.26582

Meson production in π−p and π+n interactions at 1.7 GeV/c has been studied in two bubble-chamber exposures. Combined results are presented with emphasis on single-pion production (4300 events) which is dominated by the formation of the ρ0 meson in peripheral interactions, and on double-pion production (1100 events) which shows strong formation of the ω meson. These data are compared with the predictions of particle-exchange models, including absorption, and the effects of competing channels are discussed. Evidence for a two-pion decay mode of the ω is examined quantitatively. Processes with higher meson multiplicities are described.

1 data table

No description provided.


Study of Electron-Positron Annihilation into pi+pi- at 775 MeV with the Orsay Storage Ring

Augustin, J.E. ; Bizot, J.C. ; Buon, J. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.Lett. 20 (1968) 126-129, 1968.
Inspire Record 54563 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.21756

None

1 data table

No description provided.


Study of the phi meson production with the orsay electron-positron colliding beams

Augustin, J.E. ; Bizot, J.C. ; Buon, J. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 28 (1969) 517-520, 1969.
Inspire Record 56680 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.6179

We have measured the e + e − → φ reaction by the K S 0 K L 0 and 3 π decay modes of the φ. We have deduced Γ ( φ → all), Γ ( φ →e + e − ), as well as B ( φ →K S 0 K L 0 ), B ( φ →K + K − ) and B ( φ → π + π − π 0 ).

3 data tables

No description provided.

RESONANCE FIT TO 12 DATA POINTS AROUND PHI FOR EACH CHANNEL GIVES PHI WIDTH OF 4.2 +- 0.9 MEV AND BR(PHI --> PI+ PI0 PI-/PHI --> KL KS) OF 0.667 +- 0.157 (RATHER HIGH).

No description provided.


Study of electron-positron annihilation into pi-plus pi-minus on the rho-neutral resonance

Augustin, J.E. ; Bizot, J.C. ; Buon, J. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 28 (1969) 508-512, 1969.
Inspire Record 56683 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.29076

The electromagnetic form factor of the pion has been determined in the ϱ o resonance region by measuring the absolute cross section of the reaction e + e − → π + π − with the Orsay storage ring. More than 800 pion pairs have been detected. The excitation curve has been fitted with a Breit-Wigner formula which leads to the following values: σ peak = (1.69 ± 0.21) 10 −30 cm 2 ; m ϱ = (770 ± 4) MeV ; Γ ϱ = (111 ± 6) MeV . The partial width of the ϱ o going into e + e − thus obtained is: Γ ϱ → e + e − =(7.36±0.7) keV .

1 data table

No description provided.


Production of xi- and antixi+ particles in k+ p collisions at 12.7 gev/c

Stone, S.L. ; Berlinghieri, J.C. ; Bromberg, C. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 32 (1970) 515-518, 1970.
Inspire Record 63098 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.28710

The cross section for the production of Ξ + particles in K + p interactions at 12.7 GeV/ c is 10 ± 3 μ b; the Ξ − production cross section is 2.5 ± 1.0 μ b; the upper limit on Ω − or Ω + production is 0.4 μb. The Ξ − are produced preferentially in the backward direction in the CM system while the Ξ + are produced mainly forward. The mass and lifetime of the Ξ + agree with the accepted values for the Ξ − hyperon.

1 data table

Cross sections have been corrected for the detection probability of all observed hyperons involved in these reactions.


Search for exotic resonances in k- d interactions at 3 gev/c

The SABRE collaboration Giacomelli, G. ; Lugaresi-Serra, P. ; Minguzzi-Ranzi, A. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 33 (1970) 373-376, 1970.
Inspire Record 63055 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.28726

A systematic search for exotic states produced in K − d interactions at 3 GeV/ c is reported. From the analysis of the mass spectra of strange mesons, non-strange mesons, hyperons with S = −1 and S = −2, upper limits for the production cross sections of exotic resonances may be placed at one or two orders of magnitude smaller than for the production of normal resonances of same strangeness and baryon number.

1 data table

No description provided.


Study of the phi meson by e+ e- annihilation into charged k mesons and tests of vector dominance models

Bizot, J.C. ; Buon, J. ; Chatelus, Y. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 32 (1970) 416-420, 1970.
Inspire Record 63115 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.28809

We have measured the e + e − → ø reaction by its K + K − decay mode. Using our previous results on K O K O and the 3π decay mode of the ø mesons, we compute Γ ø → e + e − and then compare the whole Orsay results to theoretical predictions.

2 data tables

FITTED CROSS SECTIONS AT PHI PEAK. ONLY PHI --> K+ K- MEASURED HERE - ANALYSIS USES PREVIOUS EXPERIMENTS FOR OTHER CHANNELS: J.E. AUGUSTIN ET AL., PL 28B, 517 (1969).

EXCITATION OF K+ K- CHANNEL MEASURED AROUND PHI RESONANCE AT 13 ENERGIES.


Baryon exchange in the reactions k- n ---> y pi- at 3-GeV/c

The SABRE collaboration Barloutaud, R. ; Merrill, D. ; Scheuer, J.C. ; et al.
Nucl.Phys.B 26 (1971) 557-572, 1971.
Inspire Record 68766 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.33717

At 3 GeV/ c , the total and differential cross sections of the reactions K − n → Y π − have been determined for nine S = −1 baryonic states. Backward peaks associated with a dip near u = −0.2 are observed in many cases. They have been interpreted, for the isospin-zero Y-states, in terms of a proton-exchange mechanism. The backward peaks in the reactions K − n → Λπ − and K − n → Σ o π − have been more quantitatively related to the backward π N → N π differential cross sections at the same energy. This comparison leads to the conclusion, that the first reaction is dominated by nucleon exchange, whereas the second one requires a more complex exchange mechanism.

8 data tables

No description provided.

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