Compton scattering cross section on the proton at high momentum transfer.

The Hall A collaboration Danagoulian, A. ; Mamyan, V.H. ; Roedelbronn, M. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.Lett. 98 (2007) 152001, 2007.
Inspire Record 743383 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.31472

Cross-section values for Compton scattering on the proton were measured at 25 kinematic settings over the range s = 5-11 and -t = 2-7 GeV2 with statistical accuracy of a few percent. The scaling power for the s-dependence of the cross section at fixed center of mass angle was found to be 8.0 +/ 0.2, strongly inconsistent with the prediction of perturbative QCD. The observed cross-section values are in fair agreement with the calculations using the handbag mechanism, in which the external photons couple to a single quark.

4 data tables

Cross section of proton Compton Scattering at centre of mass energy squared of 4.82 GeV.

Cross section of proton Compton Scattering at centre of mass energy squared of 6.79 GeV.

Cross section of proton Compton Scattering at centre of mass energy squared of 8.90 GeV.

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Precision Measurements of the Anti-proton - Proton Elastic Scattering Cross-section at 90-degrees in the Incident Momentum Range Between 3.5-{GeV}/$c$ and 5.7-{GeV}/$c$

The R704 collaboration Baglin, C. ; Baird, S. ; Bassompierre, G. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 225 (1989) 296-300, 1989.
Inspire Record 278760 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.29802

The high antiproton-proton luminosity obtained by using a target system consisting of a hydrogen gas-jet crossing a coasting beam of cooled antiproton circulating in one of the rings of CERN's ISR provides the possibility to measure low cross section reactions with very high precision. We present measurements of the antiproton-proton elastic cross section at 90° CM at incident momenta between 3.5 GeV/ c and 5.7 GeV/ c . The precision of these measurements is much higher than previously reported results. The data show that the cross section of this reaction decreases faster than s −12 over this momentum range.

2 data tables

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A MEASUREMENT OF THE K0(L) p ELASTIC CROSS-SECTION FOR 3 less than or equal to p less than or equal to 13-GeV/c AND .1 less than or equal to |t| less than or equal to 1.3-GeV**2

Cittolin, S. ; Gasparini, F. ; Limentani, S. ; et al.
Nucl.Phys.B 157 (1979) 197-211, 1979.
Inspire Record 7663 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.34662

The cross section for the K L 0 p elastic scattering has been measured for the first time. The incident momentum and momentum transfer ranges are 3 ⩽ p ⩽ 13 GeV/ c , 0.1 ⩽ | t | ⩽ 1.3 GeV 2 . The results are compared to those of other experiments related to ours by isotopic spin conservation, finding agreement with some and discrepancies with others. The differential cross sections have been parametrized in the form A e bt . The coefficients show little or no dependence on energy, with A ≅ 9.8 mb · GeV −2 and b ≅ 4.7 GeV −2 . The effective linear trajectory has been determined and gives α 0 = 0.95 ± 0.15, α ′ = −0.35 ± 0.48 GeV −2 , in good agreement with dominance by pomeron exchange.

3 data tables

CROSS SECTIONS DEDUCED FROM THE 46 PCT OF EVENTS WHICH YIELD UNIQUE SOLUTIONS.

<RAW> CROSS SECTIONS DEDUCED FROM A STATISTICAL TREATMENT OF ALL EVENTS.

<SMOOTHED> CROSS SECTIONS DEDUCED FROM A STATISTICAL TREATMENT OF ALL EVENTS.


Small Angle Compton Scattering on Hydrogen and Deuterium

Criegee, L. ; Franke, G. ; Giese, A. ; et al.
Nucl.Phys.B 121 (1977) 31-37, 1977.
Inspire Record 118810 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.35467

We have measured elastic scattering of 5 and 6 GeV photons on hydrogen and deuterium in the angular range 10–50 mrad. On hydrogen we observe a forward diffraction peak with a slope of 8.5 (GeV/ c ) −2 . The extrapolated forward cross sections in units μ b/(GeV/ c ) 2 are 0.82 ± 0.04 at 5 GeV and 0.79 ± 0.04 at 6 GeV. They are consistent with the calculated amplitudes obtained from total cross section measurements via the optical theorem and dispersion relations assuming negligible contributions of spin-dependent amplitudes. Deuterium cross sections show a transition from coherent scattering at low | t | to incoherent scattering at higher | t |. They indicate that the isovector exchange amplitude a 1 is very small compared to the isoscalar a 0 . We obtain |a 1 | 2 /|a 0 +a 1 | 2 =0.13±0.09 , Re (a 0 a ∗ 1 )/|a 0 +a 1 | 2 =0.0±0.03, at 5 GeV , |a 1 | 2 /|a 0 +a 1 | 2 =−0.12±0.15 , Re (a 0 a ∗ 1 )/|a 0 +a 1 | 2 =0.10±0.04, at 6 GeV .

2 data tables

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Systematic study of pi+- p, k+- p, p p, and anti-p p forward elastic scattering from 3 to 6 gev/c

Ambats, I. ; Ayres, D.S. ; Diebold, R. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 9 (1974) 1179-1209, 1974.
Inspire Record 92992 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.3409

Measurements of π±p, K±p, pp, and p¯p elastic scattering are presented for incident momenta of 3, 3.65, 5, and 6 GeVc and momentum transfers typically 0.03 to 1.8 GeV2. The angle and momentum of the scattered particle were measured with the Argonne Effective Mass Spectrometer for 300 000 events, yielding 930 cross-section values with an uncertainty in absolute normalization of ±4%. Only the K+ and proton data show any significant change in slope of the forward diffraction peak with incident momentum. The particle-antiparticle crossover positions are consistent with no energy dependence, average values being 0.14 ± 0.03, 0.190 ± 0.006, and 0.162 ± 0.004 GeV2 for π' s, K' s, and protons, respectively; these errors reflect both statistics and the ±1.5% uncertainty in particle-antiparticle relative normalization. Differences between particle and antiparticle cross sections isolate interference terms between amplitudes of opposite C parity in the t channel; these differences indicate that the imaginary part of the odd-C nonflip-helicity amplitude has a J0(r(−t)12) structure for −t<0.8 GeV2, as predicted by strong absorption models. The cross-section differences for K± and proton-antiproton are in qualitative agreement with the predictions of ω universality, the agreement improving with increasing energy. The corresponding quark-model predictions relating the π± and K± differences failed by more than a factor of 2. We have combined our π± cross sections with other data to better determine the πN amplitudes in a model-independent way; results of this analysis are presented.

18 data tables

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