$\pi^+ p$ Elastic Scatterings at 2.35 and 2.90 BeV/c

Kramer, Paul R. ; Plano, Richard J. ;
PhD Thesis, Rutgers U., Piscataway, 1966.
Inspire Record 1407272 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.69629

None

3 data tables

No description provided.

No description provided.

No description provided.


K+ P ELASTIC SCATTERING AT 3.5-GeV/c AND 5.0-GeV/c

De Baere, W. ; Debaisieux, J. ; Dufour, J.P. ; et al.
Nuovo Cim.A 45 (1966) 885, 1966.
Inspire Record 50048 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.37572

The elastic scattering of K+ mesons on protons is studied at 3.5 and 5 GeV/c. The total elastic cross-sections are found to be (4.36±0.36) mb and (3.82±0.41) mb respectively. The differential elastic cross-sections, which exhibit characteristic diffraction peaks, are fitted by dσ/dt=(dσ/dt)0eαt, giving α=(3.85±0.12) and (4.70±0.21) (GeV/c)−2 for the two momenta respectively, with |t|⪝0.65 (GeV/c)2. The results are compared to those at neighbouring energies, giving some support to the presence of a real part of the forward scattering amplitude. The diffraction peak shows definite shrinking with increasing momenta. The data are examined in the light of models for high-energy scattering.

1 data table

No description provided.


Measurement of the Recoil Proton Polarization in Elastic $\pi^-p$ Scattering at $T_\pi=410$ and 492 MeV

Bareyre, P. ; Bricman, C. ; Longo, M.J. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.Lett. 14 (1965) 878-880, 1965.
Inspire Record 945162 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.21824

None

2 data tables

No description provided.

No description provided.


Proton-Proton Elastic Scattering Involving Large Momentum Transfers

Cocconi, G. ; Cocconi, V.T. ; Krisch, A.D. ; et al.
Phys.Rev. 138 (1965) B165-B172, 1965.
Inspire Record 49634 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.26688

Twenty-nine proton-proton differential elastic cross sections for lab momenta p0 from 11 to 31.8 BeV/c, at four-momentum transfers squared, −t, from 2.3 to 24.4 (BeV/c)2, have been measured at the Brookhaven alternating gradient synchrotron. The circulating proton beam impinged upon a thin CH2 internal target. Both scattered protons from p−p elastic events were detected by scintillation-counter telescopes which were placed downstream from deflection magnets set at the appropriate angles to the incident beam. The angular correlation of the protons, their momenta, and the coplanarity of the events were determined by the detection system. The results show that at high momentum transfers the differential cross section, dσdt, depends strongly upon the energy; for −t=10 (BeV/c)2, the value of dσdt at p0=30 BeV/c is smaller by a factor∼1000 than at p0=10 BeV/c. At all energies, dσdt falls rapidly with increasing |t| for scattering angles up to about 65° (c.m.), while in the range from 65 to 90° the cross section falls only by a factor of about 2. The smallest cross section measured was 9×10−37 cm2 sr−1 (c.m.), at p0=31.8 BeV/c and −t=20.4 (BeV/c)2; this is about 3×10−12 of the zero-degree cross section at the same energy.

1 data table

'1'. '2'.


Elastic Scattering and Cross Sections in Antiproton-Proton Interactions at 3.3 and 3.7 BeV/c

Ferbel, T. ; Firestone, A. ; Sandweiss, J. ; et al.
Phys.Rev. 137 (1965) B1250-B1255, 1965.
Inspire Record 944963 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.466

The elastic, the pion-production, and the multipion-annihilation cross sections for antiproton-proton interactions at 3.28 and 3.66 BeV/c incident antiproton momenta have been measured. A comparison of the elastic interactions at 3.28 BeV/c with a purely-absorbing disc optical model gave a best value for the radius of interaction of 1.3 F. The real part of the forward scattering amplitude has been found to be less than 20% of the imaginary part. A study of the asymmetries in double elastic scatters yielded a value for a polarizing power of the hydrogen consistent with zero when averaged over production angles.

6 data tables

No description provided.

More…

Measurement of the Recoil Proton Polarization in Elastic pi+p Scattering at Tpi=410and492 MeV

Bareyre, P. ; Bricman, C. ; Longo, M.J. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.Lett. 14 (1965) 198-201, 1965.
Inspire Record 944925 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.21847

None

2 data tables

No description provided.

No description provided.


Polarization and Differential Cross Sections in Proton-Proton and Proton-Nucleus Scatterings at 725 MeV

McManigal, Paul G. ; Eandi, Richard D. ; Kaplan, Selig N. ; et al.
Phys.Rev. 137 (1965) B620-B629, 1965.
Inspire Record 49431 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.26687

The polarization and angular distribution of protons scattered from protons, helium, beryllium, carbon, aluminum, calcium, iron, and tantalum were measured as functions of angle at 725 MeV. A variation of the usual double-elastic-scattering method was used, in that the sense of the first scattering angle was reversed in finding asymmetries, rather than the second angle. Energy analysis of the scattered beam was accomplished by means of a 102-degree magnetic spectrometer allowing a total resolution of ±10 MeV. The data were fitted with an optical model. In the proton-nucleus scattering the polarization reaches a maximum value of about 40% at angles less than the diffraction minimum. Results in proton-proton scatterings are more interesting; however, because of an uncertainty in the analyzing power of carbon, a definite statement cannot be made. One can say, however, that either the polarization in proton-proton scatterings is above 50% at this energy or the analyzing power of carbon at 6 deg and 600 MeV is more than 40%, which is considerably greater than the 30% measured at 725 MeV.

7 data tables

No description provided.

No description provided.

No description provided.

More…

A_1 and A_2 Resonances in pi- p Interactions at 2.75 GeV/c

Alitti, J. ; Baton, J.P. ; Deler, B. ; et al.
Phys.Lett. 15 (1965) 69, 1965.
Inspire Record 49807 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.30488

None

1 data table

No description provided.


Angular Distribution of Charge Exchange and Inelastic Neutrons in $\pi^- - p$ Interactions at 313 and 371 MeV

Lind, Don L. ; Barish, Barry C. ; Ku, Richard J. ; et al.
Phys.Rev. 138 (1965) B1509-B1517, 1965.
Inspire Record 1186787 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.467

Neutron angular distributions from the charge-exchange (π0n) and inelastic modes (π0π0n,π+π−n) of the π−−p interaction have been investigated at 313 and 371 MeV incident-pion kinetic energy. The data were obtained with an electronic counter system. Elastic and inelastic neutrons were separated in the all-neutral final states by time of flight. At both energies the charge-exchange differential cross section at the forward neutron angles differs from that determined by Caris et al. from measurements of the π0-decay gamma distributions, but generally agrees with the phase-shift-analysis calculations of Roper. The distribution of inelastic neutrons from both modes shows a strong preference for low center-of-mass neutron energies. The distribution of these neutrons does not correspond to that expected from the I=0, π−π interaction (ABC effect) suggested to account for the anomaly in p−d collisions observed by Abashian et al. Finally, all available charge-exchange differential-cross-section data from this and other experiments were combined by at least-squares fit to a Legendre expansion of the form dσdΩ*(cosθπ0*)=Σl=0NalPl(cosθπ0*) with the following results (in mb/sr):

6 data tables

No description provided.

No description provided.

No description provided.

More…

Polarization of Recoil Protons in pi + /- p Elastic Scattering at 864, 981, and 1301 MeV

Eandi, Richard D. ; Devlin, Thomas J. ; Kenney, Robert W. ; et al.
Phys.Rev. 136 (1964) B1187-B1189, 1964.
Inspire Record 944970 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.535

Angular distributions of recoil-proton polarization in elastic π±p scattering were measured at 864-, 981-, and 1301-MeV incident pion kinetic energy. Polarization measurements were made by observing the azimuthal asymmetry in the subsequent scattering of recoil protons in large carbon-plate spark chambers. The spark chambers proved to be very suitable polarization analyzer detectors. Strong variation of the polarization with backward pion scattering angle was observed.

5 data tables

No description provided.

No description provided.

No description provided.

More…