a0(980)+ resonance production in p p --> d K+ anti-K0 reactions close to threshold.

Kleber, V. ; Buescher, Markus ; Chernyshev, V. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.Lett. 91 (2003) 172304, 2003.
Inspire Record 617741 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.31682

The reaction pp->d K+ Kbar0 has been investigated at an excess energy of Q=46 MeV above the (K+ Kbar0) threshold with ANKE at COSY-Juelich. From the detected coincident dK+ pairs about 1000 events with a missing Kbar0 were identified, corresponding to a total cross section of sigma(pp->d K+ Kbar0)=(38 +/- 2(stat) +/- 14(syst)) nb. Invariant-mass and angular distributions have been jointly analyzed and reveal s-wave dominance between the two kaons, accompanied by a p-wave between the deuteron and the kaon system. This is interpreted in terms of a0+(980)-resonance production.

6 data tables

Total cross section for P P --> DEUT K+ KBAR0.

Centre of mass angular distribution of the deuteron with respect to the direction of the incoming proton.

Centre of mass angular distribution of the vector joining the K+ and KBAR0 with respect to the direction of the incoming proton.

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Proton induced deuteron breakup at GeV energies with forward emission of a fast proton pair.

Komarov, V. ; Dymov, S. ; Kacharava, A. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 553 (2003) 179-185, 2003.
Inspire Record 599592 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.31711

A study of the deuteron breakup reaction $pd \to (pp)n$ with forward emission of a fast proton pair with small excitation energy $E_{pp}<$ 3 MeV has been performed at the ANKE spectrometer at COSY--J\ulich. An exclusive measurement was carried out at six proton--beam energies $T_p=$~0.6,~0.7,~0.8,~0.95,~1.35, and 1.9 GeV by reconstructing the momenta of the two protons. The differential cross section of the breakup reaction, averaged up to $8^{\circ}$ over the cm polar angle of the total momentum of the $pp$ pairs, has been obtained. Since the kinematics of this process is quite similar to that of backward elastic $pd \to dp$ scattering, the results are compared to calculations based on a theoretical model previously applied to the $pd \to dp$ process.

1 data table

The measured cross section of the process P DEUT --> P P N in the interval E(PP) < 3 MeV versus the proton beam energy.


Coherent pi0 threshold production from the deuteron at Q**2 = 0.1-GeV**2/c**2.

Ewald, Ingo ; Bartsch, Peter ; Baumann, Dagmar ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 499 (2001) 238-244, 2001.
Inspire Record 534929 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.31443

First data on coherent threshold \pi^0 electroproduction from the deuteron taken by the A1 Collaboration at the Mainz Microtron MAMI are presented. At a four-momentum transfer of q^2=-0.1 GeV^2/c^2 the full solid angle was covered up to a center-of-mass energy of 4 MeV above threshold. By means of a Rosenbluth separation the longitudinal threshold s wave multipole and an upper limit for the transverse threshold s wave multipole could be extracted and compared to predictions of Heavy Baryon Chiral Perturbation Theory.

3 data tables

Differential cross-section d(SIG(PI0))/d(OMEGA) is related to electron-deuteron one by the relation as follows: d(SIG)/d(OMEGA_e)/d(E_e)/d(OMEGA) = Gamma *d(SIG)/d(OMEGA), where the virtual photon flux is give by: Gamma = (alpha/2*pi**2) * (E'/E) * (k_gamma/Q2) / (1-epsilon). Here epsilon is transverse degree of polarization of the virtual photon. See article for details.

Differential cross-section d(SIG(PI0))/d(OMEGA) is related to electron-deuteron one by the relation as follows: d(SIG)/d(OMEGA_e)/d(E_e)/d(OMEGA) = Gamma *d(SIG)/d(OMEGA), where the virtual photon flux is give by: Gamma = (alpha/2*pi**2) * (E'/E) * (k_gamma/Q2) / (1-epsilon). Here epsilon is transverse degree of polarizatiuon of the virtual photon. See article for details.

Differential cross-section d(SIG(PI0))/d(OMEGA) is related to electron-deuteron one by the relation as follows: d(SIG)/d(OMEGA_e)/d(E_e)/d(OMEGA) = Gamma *d(SIG)/d(OMEGA), where the virtual photon flux is give by: Gamma = (alpha/2*pi**2) * (E'/E) * (k_gamma/Q2) / (1-epsilon). Here epsilon is transverse degree of polarizatiuon of the virtual photon. See article for details.