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Multiplicity distributions of charged particles produced in the pseudorapidity range 0.9 < η lab < 5.5 were measured in oxygen-nucleus collisions for Al, Ag, and W target nuclei at incident energies of 60 and 200 GeV per nucleon. The multiplicity differential cross sections and the pseudorapidity distributions as a function of transverse energy are presented for the various target nuclei. The correlation between charged multiplicity and transverse energy is studied as a function of transverse energy. Data are compared with predictions of the IRIS and FRITIOF generators.
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The scaled factorial moments, F q and fractal moments, G q have been measured and their power law variation as a function of size of the pseudorapidity interval has been studied in the central region of the pseudorapidity distribution of the produced charged particles in quasi-central and central collisions of 16 O + Ag Br at 2.1 GeV c per nucleon and 24 Mg + Ag Br at 4.5 GeV c per nucleon. The smooth spectral function f ( α q ), characterizing the fluctuation in the pseudorapidity distribution and the generalised dimensions D q have been derived from G q moments. The analyses reveal a self-similarity in multiparticle production in nucleus-nucleus interactions at an incident momentum of a few GeV/ c per nucleon. Interesting observations can be very effective in establishing multifractality in multiparticle production at this energy range.
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Emission of light fragments at small angles is studied in relativistic heavy ion collisions using the Diogene plastic wall for both symmetrical and non-symmetrical target-projectile systems with 400 MeV per nucleon and 800 MeV per nucleon incident neon nuclei. Efficiency of multiplicity measurements in the small angle range for the selection of central or peripheral collisions is confirmed for asymmetric systems. Differential production cross sections of Z = 1 fragments show evidence for the existence of two emitting sources. The apparent temperature of each source is obtained from comparison with a thermodynamical model.
THE NUCLEUS IS NAF. CHARGED PARTICLES IN THE CENTRAL DRIFT CHAMBER OF THE DIOGENE DETECTOR.
THE NUCLEUS IS NAF. CHARGED PARTICLES IN THE CENTRAL DRIFT CHAMBER OF THE DIOGENE DETECTOR. THE EVENT SELECTION:A HEAVY FRAGMENT(Z>=6) IS REGISTRED IN THE PLASTIC WALL OF THE DIOGENE.
A systematic set of measurements of the global transverse energy distributions, dσ/dET and dET/dη, from beams of protons, O16 and Si28 at 14.6A GeV/c, incident on targets ranging from Be to Au is presented. The detector was a semicircular array of lead-glass blocks, covering polar angles 9°<θ<32°, whose total response provides a good measure of the produced particle yield in the central rapidity region of these reactions. Proton-nucleus spectra exhibit a similar shape on the high-energy tail, independent of target, suggesting that produced particles in such events arise mostly from the first collision of the projectile proton. For targets heavier than Cu, the high-energy edges of the oxygen-nucleus spectra, and of the silicon-nucleus spectra, reach ratios consistent with the geometry of central collisions. Angular distributions, dET/dη, are characterized by Gaussian fits, and an acceptance-independent form of the differential cross section is found, based on the maximum value of dET/dη. The projectile dependence of nucleus-nucleus spectra is studied in terms of two very different models: simple energy scaling and the wounded projectile nucleon model of p+A convolutions.
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