Exclusive electroproduction of Phi mesons at 4.2-GeV.

The CLAS collaboration Lukashin, K. ; Smith, E.S. ; Adams, G.S. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.C 64 (2001) 059901, 2001.
Inspire Record 552246 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.38589

We studied the exclusive reaction e p --> e' p' phi using the phi --> K^+ K^- decay mode. The data were collected using a 4.2 GeV incident electron beam and the CLAS detector at Jefferson Lab. Our experiment covers the range in Q^2 from 0.7 to 2.2 GeV^2, and W from 2.0 to 2.6 GeV. Taken together with all previous data, we find a consistent picture of phi production on the proton. Our measurement shows the expected decrease of the t-slope with the vector meson formation time c Delta tau below 2 fm. At = 0.6 fm, we measure b_phi = 2.27 +- 0.42 GeV^-2. The cross section dependence on W as W^{0.2+-0.1} at Q^2 = 1.3 GeV^2 was determined by comparison with phi production at HERA after correcting for threshold effects. This is the same dependence as observed in photoproduction.

3 data tables

Slope of the DSIG/DT distribution in different Q**2 regions.

Cross section as a function of Q**2 and W.

The differential cross section for exclusive PHI electroproduction off the photon, (TP=T-TMIN).


Differential Cross-sections of Proton Compton Scattering at Photon Laboratory Energies Between 1.2-{GeV} and 1.7-{GeV}

Duda, J. ; Hofner, F.W. ; Jung, M. ; et al.
Z.Phys.C 17 (1983) 319, 1983.
Inspire Record 182590 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.50210

Differential cross sections of proton Compton scattering have been measured at the Bonn 2.5 GeV synchrotron. The experiment covers photon laboratory energies between 1.2 GeV and 1.7 GeV and the square of the four-momentum transfer ranges fromt=−0.17 GeV2 to −0.98GeV2 corresponding to c.m. scattering angles between 35° and 80°. The cross sections exhibit a forward peak followed by a monotone fall-off up to the largest measured |t|-values. Fits of the formdσ/dt=A·exp(Bt) to the data points with |t|≦0.5 GeV2 yield forward cross sectionsA, which are consistent with the 0° cross sections calculated from the measured total photon-proton cross section. The average slope isB=5.6±0.14 GeV2.

13 data tables

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