Measurement of spin-dependent total cross-section difference $\Delta\sigma_T$ in neutron-proton scattering at 16 MeV

Broz, J. ; Cerny, J. ; Dolezal, Z. ; et al.
Z.Phys.A 354 (1996) 401, 1996.
Inspire Record 397734 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.31421

A new measurement of $\Delta\sigma_T$ for polarized neutrons transmitted through a polarized proton target at 16.2 MeV has been made. A polarized neutron beam was obtained from the $^{3}\rm{H}(d,\vec n)^{4}\rm{He}$ reaction; proton polarization over 90\% was achieved in a frozen spin target of 20 cm$^3$ volume. The measurement yielded the value $\Delta\sigma_T=(-126\pm21\pm14)$ mb. The result of a simple phase shift analysis for the $^3S_1-^3D_1$ mixing parameter $\epsilon_1$ is presented and compared with the theoretical potential model predictions.

1 data table

No description provided.


Differential cross-section for n p elastic scattering in the angular region 50-degrees < Theta* < 180-degrees at 459-MeV

Northcliffe, L.C. ; Jain, M. ; Evans, M.L. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.C 47 (1993) 36-46, 1993.
Inspire Record 358672 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.26016

The differential cross section for n-p elastic scattering at 459 MeV in the c.m. angular region 50°<θ*<180° has been measured with high statistical precision and good relative accuracy. The uncertainty in the absolute normalization (based on the simultaneously measured yield of deuterons from the np→dπ0 reaction) was initially estimated to be ∼7%. The results agree well with back-angle data obtained independently at LAMPF but less well with results from Saclay and the Princeton-Pennsylvania Accelerator and, except for a normalization difference of 10%, are fairly well represented by a phase-shift fit. The pole-extrapolation method of Chew was used to extract the pion-nucleon coupling constant f2 from the back-angle portion of the data. The value obtained, f2=0.069, is somewhat smaller than the values 0.0735–0.0790 obtained from analyses of pion-nucleon scattering, tending to confirm the need for an upward renormalization of the angular distribution by ∼10%.

1 data table

No description provided.