Interactions of High Energy Particles with NucleiNational Bureau of Standards, 1975 - 69 pages |
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Results 1-5 of 12
Page 13
... POSSIBLE EXCITED STATES Suppose we reject the intermediate excited states and take only the ground state as a possible inter- mediate state ( this is the way to eliminate all channels but one ) . Then each y , can be averaged over r ...
... POSSIBLE EXCITED STATES Suppose we reject the intermediate excited states and take only the ground state as a possible inter- mediate state ( this is the way to eliminate all channels but one ) . Then each y , can be averaged over r ...
Page 14
... possible phase shifts of the pairs of components of ( a ) and ( b ) . Let us consider some limiting cases of eq ( 3.2 ) ( compare ref . [ 12 ] ) . Let the radii of the two composite objects be R. and Rь . The calculations of ref . [ 12 ] ...
... possible phase shifts of the pairs of components of ( a ) and ( b ) . Let us consider some limiting cases of eq ( 3.2 ) ( compare ref . [ 12 ] ) . Let the radii of the two composite objects be R. and Rь . The calculations of ref . [ 12 ] ...
Page 18
... possible effects which the model allows for ) and then found a definite dis- crepancy with experimentally measured Tor - it would very strongly suggest the existence of inelastic shadowing phenomena described above . In fact such an ...
... possible effects which the model allows for ) and then found a definite dis- crepancy with experimentally measured Tor - it would very strongly suggest the existence of inelastic shadowing phenomena described above . In fact such an ...
Page 22
... possible deformations ) but not internal correlations . From the published analyses of hadron - nucleus scattering ( see e.g. , [ S2 ] , [ 15 ] , [ 3 ] ) one may conclude that : ( i ) the shapes of target nuclei are the 22.
... possible deformations ) but not internal correlations . From the published analyses of hadron - nucleus scattering ( see e.g. , [ S2 ] , [ 15 ] , [ 3 ] ) one may conclude that : ( i ) the shapes of target nuclei are the 22.
Page 27
... possible relativistic deformations of the recoiling target ( we are still discussing only elastic processes ) . For large momentum transfers ( A2 / M2 ~ 1 ) this is probably not a good approximation . Take the deuteron example . In the ...
... possible relativistic deformations of the recoiling target ( we are still discussing only elastic processes ) . For large momentum transfers ( A2 / M2 ~ 1 ) this is probably not a good approximation . Take the deuteron example . In the ...
Common terms and phrases
absorption additivity of phase anomalous magnetic moment ú approximately assume attenuation beam Bureau of Standards coherent diffractive production collision Compton scattering compute Coulomb interactions Czyż d³r db bJo db exp i▲·b deuteron diagonalization diffractive production processes diffractive scattering discussed double scattering elastic scattering amplitude electromagnetic equation example excited experiments factor Feynman diagrams formula four-momentum Glauber model hadrons Hence high energy limit incident particle incident wave inelastic shadowing Interactions of High invariant mass K mesons multiple scattering National Bureau neutrino neutrons ññ Note nuclear matter nuclear targets nuclei nucleon obtained optical theorem parameters phase shifts photon photoproduction of vector physical pion production amplitude profiles quantum numbers regeneration Řº shadowing effects single scattering spin strongly interacting target nucleus total cross section vector meson VMD model wave function Απ γν ΦΩ