Comparison of deep inelastic electron photon scattering data with the HERWIG and PHOJET Monte Carlo models.

The ALEPH & L3 & OPAL & LEP Working Group collaborations Achard, P. ; Andreev, V. ; Braccini, S. ; et al.
Eur.Phys.J.C 23 (2002) 201-223, 2002.
Inspire Record 535230 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.49877

Deep inelastic electron-photon scattering is studied in the Q**2 range from 1.2 to 30 GeV**2 using the LEP1 data taken with the ALEPH, L3 and OPAL detectors at centre-of-mass energies close to the mass of the Z boson. Distributions of the measured hadronic final state are corrected to the hadron level and compared to the predictions of the HERWIG and PHOJET Monte Carlo models. For large regions in most of the distributions studied the results of the different experiments agree with one another. However, significant differences are found between the data and the models. Therefore the combined LEP data serve as an important input to improve on the Monte Carlo models.

11 data tables

The individual differential cross sections (DSIG/DW) in the low Q**2 regions for the three experiments.. The data are corrected using the HERWIG-kt model.

The combined differential cross sections (DSIG/DW) separately for the low and high Q**2 regions. The data are corrected using the HERWIG-kt model.

The combined differential cross sections (DSIG/DW) separately for the low and high Q**2 regions. The data are corrected using the PHOJET model.

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Study of hadronic final states from double tagged gamma gamma events at LEP.

The ALEPH collaboration Heister, A. ; Schael, S. ; Barate, R. ; et al.
CERN-EP-2003-025, 2003.
Inspire Record 619958 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.49702

The interaction of virtual photons is investigated using double tagged gammagamma events with hadronic final states recorded by the ALEPH experiment at e^+e^- centre-of-mass energies between 188 and 209 GeV. The measured cross section is compared to Monte Carlo models, and to next-to-leading-order QCD and BFKL calculations.

10 data tables

Differential cross section as a function of the relative energy of the scattered electrons.

Differential cross section as a function of the polar angle THETA of the scattered electrons.

Differential cross section as a function of the virtuality Q**2 of the photons.

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