Thick-target recoil properties of deep spallation and fragmentation products of the interaction of tantalum with 3.65 AGeV 12C-ions and 3.65 GeV protons have been studied. The kinematic parameters such as mean product kinetic energies and velocities of the remnant have been deduced from the data by means of the two-step vector velocity model of high-energy reactions. The results have also been used to test the applicability of the factorization hypothesis to the kinematic properties.
ASYM=F/B, WHERE F AND B ARE THE FRACTIONAL NUMBERS OF PRODUCT RECOILING INTO THE FORWARD AND BACKWARD CATCHER, RESPECTIVELY.
ASYM=F/B, WHERE F AND B ARE THE FRACTIONAL NUMBERS OF PRODUCT RECOILING INTO THE FORWARD AND BACKWARD CATCHER, RESPECTIVELY.
The cross sections of a number of target residues formed in the reactions of 3.65 A GeV 12C ions and 3.65 GeV protons with tantalum have been measured. The measurements have been done by direct counting of irradiated targets with a Ge(Li) gamma-ray spectrometer. Charge dispersions and mass-yield distributions were deduced from these data. The results are discussed in terms of the basic concepts of high-energy nuclear physics. They are also compared with intranuclear cascade and abrasion-ablation model calculations.
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