The angular distributions for deuteron photodisintegration have been measured in the energy region 140 – 400 MeV for recoil protons laboratory angles between 30° and 130°. The protons were analyzed in momentum with a magnetic spectrometer and detected by a counter hodoscope.
No description provided.
The cross section for the reaction 2H(γ, p)n has been measured at laboratory photon energies Eγ = 133−158 MeV and c.m. angles between 30° and 150°. The reaction was induced by a tagged bremsstrahlung photon beam incident on a liquid deuterium target. The uncertainty in the absolute cross sections is ⩽ 5%. There is now reasonable agreement between recent measurements in this energy region and the overall data set now defines the cross section sufficiently well to provide a test of current models of the reaction.
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Nearly complete angular distributions of the two-body deuteron photodisintegration differential cross section have been measured using the CLAS detector and the tagged photon beam at JLab. The data cover photon energies between 0.5 and 3.0 GeV and center-of-mass proton scattering angles 10-160 degrees. The data show a persistent forward-backward angle asymmetry over the explored energy range, and are well-described by the non-perturbative Quark Gluon String Model.
Angular distributions of the photodisintegration cross section for angle between 10 and 50 degrees in the CM.
Angular distributions of the photodisintegration cross section for angle between 50 and 90 degrees in the CM.
Angular distributions of the photodisintegration cross section for angle between 90 and 130 degrees in the CM.
High resolution measurements of the reaction C12(γ,n) at Eγ∼58 MeV are presented. The distribution of strength to the resolved bound final states in C11 is compared with that of B11 obtained in previous analogous (γ,p) measurements and the implications for the theoretical description of (γ,N) reactions are discussed. These new results confirm the importance of two-nucleon effects in intermediate energy photon absorption and highlight inadequacies in state-of-the-art microscopic calculations of (γ,N) reactions.
No description provided.
The differential cross section for the reaction H2(γ,p)n has been measured at several center-of-mass angles ranging from 50° to 143° for photon energies between 0.8 and 1.8 GeV. The experiment was performed at the SLAC-NPAS facility with the use of the 1.6 GeV/c spectrometer to detect the high energy protons produced by a bremsstrahlung beam directed at a liquid deuterium target. Contributions from concurrent disintegration by the residual electron beam were determined by measuring the proton yield without the Cu photon radiator. At angles not very far from 90°, the energy dependence of the cross sections is consistent with predictions of scaling using counting rules for constituent quarks. At least one theoretical calculation based on a meson-baryon picture of the reaction is able to reproduce the magnitude and energy dependence of the 90° cross section. The angular distribution exhibits a large enhancement at backward angles at the higher energies.
THE QUOTED ERRORS ARE STATISTICAL ONLY.
Measurements were performed for the photodisintegration cross section of the deuteron for photon energies from 1.6 to 2.8 GeV and center-of-mass angles from 37° to 90°. The measured energy dependence of the cross section at θc.m.=90° is in agreement with the constituent counting rules.
Statistical and systematic errors have been added in quadrature. Photon energy and angle (in deg) are in center-of-mass system.
Differential cross sections for the deuteron photodisintegration process were measured for photon energies between 200 and 440 MeV using the tagged photon beam facility of the Bonn 500 MeV synchrotron. At eight angles between 18° and 145° charged particles were detected simultaneously in time-of-flight spectrometers consisting of scintillation counters. Above the resonance region the measured cross sections agree fairly well with earlier results, whereas there are larger discrepancies at low photon energies.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.