Abstract
While many physicists would agree that it is important to study interactions of different isospin states (for example comparing proton and neutron data), many of them also accept as normal data averaged or integrated over ordinary spin. However an ongoing programme at Brookhaven studying elastic scattering (where the incoming particles 'bounce' off each other) produced marked spin effects which are not well understood. Our understanding of particle interactions should not be influenced by which observables are easy to measure and which aren't, and until a clear understanding of spin effects emerges, it is important to continue and extend these studies.
Citation Formats
Anon.
FERMILAB: High energy spin effects.
CERN: N. p.,
1991.
Web.
Anon.
FERMILAB: High energy spin effects.
CERN.
Anon.
1991.
"FERMILAB: High energy spin effects."
CERN.
@misc{etde_22396474,
title = {FERMILAB: High energy spin effects}
author = {Anon.}
abstractNote = {While many physicists would agree that it is important to study interactions of different isospin states (for example comparing proton and neutron data), many of them also accept as normal data averaged or integrated over ordinary spin. However an ongoing programme at Brookhaven studying elastic scattering (where the incoming particles 'bounce' off each other) produced marked spin effects which are not well understood. Our understanding of particle interactions should not be influenced by which observables are easy to measure and which aren't, and until a clear understanding of spin effects emerges, it is important to continue and extend these studies.}
journal = []
issue = {2}
volume = {31}
journal type = {AC}
place = {CERN}
year = {1991}
month = {Mar}
}
title = {FERMILAB: High energy spin effects}
author = {Anon.}
abstractNote = {While many physicists would agree that it is important to study interactions of different isospin states (for example comparing proton and neutron data), many of them also accept as normal data averaged or integrated over ordinary spin. However an ongoing programme at Brookhaven studying elastic scattering (where the incoming particles 'bounce' off each other) produced marked spin effects which are not well understood. Our understanding of particle interactions should not be influenced by which observables are easy to measure and which aren't, and until a clear understanding of spin effects emerges, it is important to continue and extend these studies.}
journal = []
issue = {2}
volume = {31}
journal type = {AC}
place = {CERN}
year = {1991}
month = {Mar}
}