Measurement of the production cross-section of positive pions in p Al collisions at 12.9-GeV/c.

The HARP collaboration Catanesi, M.G. ; Muciaccia, M.T. ; Radicioni, E. ; et al.
Nucl.Phys.B 732 (2006) 1-45, 2006.
Inspire Record 695147 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.41874

A precision measurement of the double-differential production cross-section, ${{d^2 \sigma^{\pi^+}}}/{{d p d\Omega}}$, for pions of positive charge, performed in the HARP experiment is presented. The incident particles are protons of 12.9 GeV/c momentum impinging on an aluminium target of 5% nuclear interaction length. The measurement of this cross-section has a direct application to the calculation of the neutrino flux of the K2K experiment. After cuts, 210000 secondary tracks reconstructed in the forward spectrometer were used in this analysis. The results are given for secondaries within a momentum range from 0.75 GeV/c to 6.5 GeV/c, and within an angular range from 30 mrad to 210 mrad. The absolute normalization was performed using prescaled beam triggers counting protons on target. The overall scale of the cross-section is known to better than 6%, while the average point-to-point error is 8.2%.

6 data tables

Double differential PI+ production cross section in the angular range 30 to 60 mrad.. Errors shown are point-to-point only.

Double differential PI+ production cross section in the angular range 60 to 90 mrad.. Errors shown are point-to-point only.

Double differential PI+ production cross section in the angular range 90 to 120 mrad.. Errors shown are point-to-point only.

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Experimental Study of the a-Dependence of Inclusive Hadron Fragmentation

Barton, D.S. ; Brandenburg, G.W. ; Busza, W. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 27 (1983) 2580, 1983.
Inspire Record 12592 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.23823

Data are presented on the inclusive production of π±, K±, p, and p¯ for π+, K+, and protons incident on nuclear targets at 100 GeV. The results cover the kinematic range 30≤P≤88 GeV/c for Pt=0.3 and 0.5 GeV/c. The observed A dependence of the invariant cross sections exhibits remarkable simplicity, which does not naturally follow from current models of particle production. The results show that the hypothesis of limiting fragmentation can be extended to include collisions with nuclei.

1 data table

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