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FERMILAB: High energy spin effects

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.
Authors:
Publication Date:
Mar 15, 1991
Product Type:
Journal Article
Report Number:
INIS-XC-15A0639
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: CERN Courier; Journal Volume: 31; Journal Issue: 2; Other Information: Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Subject:
72 PHYSICS OF ELEMENTARY PARTICLES AND FIELDS; COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS; ELASTIC SCATTERING; FERMILAB; HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS; ISOSPIN; NEUTRONS; PARTICLE INTERACTIONS; PROTONS; SPIN
OSTI ID:
22396474
Country of Origin:
CERN
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: ISSN 0304-288X; CODEN: CECOA2; TRN: XC15A0639102169
Availability:
Also available on-line: http://cds.cern.ch/record/1731878/files/vol31-issue2-p011-e.pdf
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
page(s) 11-12
Announcement Date:
Nov 10, 2015

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}
}