Total hadronic photoabsorption cross-section on nuclei in the nucleon resonance region

Bianchi, N. ; Muccifora, V. ; De Sanctis, E. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.C 54 (1996) 1688-1699, 1996.
Inspire Record 405665 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.37952

The total photoabsorption cross section for Li7, C, Al, Cu, Sn, Pb has been measured in the energy range 300–1200 MeV at Frascati with the jet-target tagged photon beam. A 4π NaI crystal detector and a lead-glass shower counter were used, respectively, to measure hadronic events and to reject the electromagnetic background. Data above 600 MeV clearly indicate a broadening of higher nucleon resonance peaks in nuclei and a reduction of the absolute value of the cross section per nucleon with respect to the free-nucleon case. This large broadening suggests a strong influence of the nuclear medium in the resonance propagation and interaction, while the systematic reduction of the measured cross sections might be due to a depletion of the resonance excitation strength and to the onset of the shadowing effect around 1 GeV. Moreover, our systematic study indicates that also the Δ-resonance excitation parameters are not the same for all nuclei, being its mass and width increasing with the nuclear density. © 1996 The American Physical Society.

1 data table

The average (GAMMA NUCLEON --> X) is computed each nucleus cross section datum with its statistical error.


Experimental Study of Nuclear Shadowing in Photoproduction

Michalowski, S. ; Andrews, D. ; Eickmeyer, J. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.Lett. 39 (1977) 737-740, 1977.
Inspire Record 124559 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.20970

The total cross section for hadron production by high-energy photons has been measured from a number of nuclei ranging from hydrogen to uranium. Some shadowing is observed at a level considerably less than predicted by conventional vector-meson dominance but consistent with a modified theory. The energy dependence predicted by vectormeson dominance is observed. The shadowing in heavy nuclei shows a smooth transition from electroproduction to photoproduction.

1 data table

No description provided.