Results 321 to 330 of about 296,098 (347)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Physics Education, 1998
Feynman diagrams can be used to explain deep inelastic scattering, but it must be remembered that the emission and absorption of a photon are not independent events - the underlying field is important.
openaire +2 more sources
Feynman diagrams can be used to explain deep inelastic scattering, but it must be remembered that the emission and absorption of a photon are not independent events - the underlying field is important.
openaire +2 more sources
1978
Deep inelastic electron and muon scattering experiments, first performed at the Stanford Linear Accelerator, have given a tantalizing glimpse of the inner structure of the proton and the neutron. The results of these experiments agree well with the hypothesis that the nucleon consists of more elementary constituents, called partons.
P. V. Landshoff, H. Osborn
openaire +2 more sources
Deep inelastic electron and muon scattering experiments, first performed at the Stanford Linear Accelerator, have given a tantalizing glimpse of the inner structure of the proton and the neutron. The results of these experiments agree well with the hypothesis that the nucleon consists of more elementary constituents, called partons.
P. V. Landshoff, H. Osborn
openaire +2 more sources
2002
If light interacts with matter without changing its frequency, the process is called elastic scattering because the photons change only their direction and not their energy. The scattered light has the same frequency as the incident light. Rayleigh scattering is one particular elastic scattering process.
Gustav Schweiger, E. James Davis
openaire +2 more sources
If light interacts with matter without changing its frequency, the process is called elastic scattering because the photons change only their direction and not their energy. The scattered light has the same frequency as the incident light. Rayleigh scattering is one particular elastic scattering process.
Gustav Schweiger, E. James Davis
openaire +2 more sources
Inelastic Neutron Scattering, Applications
1999The application of both coherent and incoherent neutron scatting techniques to problems in chemistry, physics, engineering catalysis and polymers is described. The various different types of structural and dynamic molecular information that can be obtained are illustrated.
openaire +2 more sources
Inelastic scattering from surfaces
Physical Review B, 1991Developpement d'une approche de la diffusion inelastique de sondes de basse energie sur des surfaces. Cette approche relie le regime quantique unique et nul au regime multiquantique. L'observation du fond multiphonons donne directement le facteur de forme de la maille unitaire, qui permet de caracteriser le potentiel d'interaction. Comparaison avec des
openaire +3 more sources
2002
Deep inelastic scattering (DIS) is the prototype of hard hadronic processes. As such, it provides an important — and very successful — test of perturbative QCD. It represents also the most direct way to explore the internal structure of hadrons.
Enrico Predazzi, Vincenzo Barone
openaire +2 more sources
Deep inelastic scattering (DIS) is the prototype of hard hadronic processes. As such, it provides an important — and very successful — test of perturbative QCD. It represents also the most direct way to explore the internal structure of hadrons.
Enrico Predazzi, Vincenzo Barone
openaire +2 more sources
Elastic and inelastic scattering of
Physical Review C, 1984A differentially pumped gas cell was used to study the angular and energy dependence of elastic and inelastic scattering of /sup 16/O from /sup 20/Ne. The data exhibit the characteristic features of gross and intermediate structures observed previously for lighter systems.
G.M. Berkowitz+6 more
openaire +2 more sources
Inelastic Diffraction Scattering
Physical Review, 1960The method of distorted waves Born approximation is shown to be equivalent to the first-order adiabatic method for the calculation of inelastic scattering. The flexibility of the distorted waves method was indicated and tested by numerical calculation for a simplified model.
E. Rost, N. Austern
openaire +2 more sources
Inelastic Scattering Amplitudes
AIP Conference Proceedings, 1973New results from inelastic two‐body scattering reactions are reviewed. Although predictions of SU(3), factorization and simple Regge theory are found to be qualitatively in agreement with the data, direct channel or absorption effects afford the simplest interpretation of the detailed features of the scattering amplitudes.
openaire +2 more sources
Phonon Inelastic Scattering [PDF]
The quantum state of the motion of atoms within a solid with translational symmetry can be described by the phonon dispersion relation and the phonon density of states. At the surface the conditions of motion for the atoms are changed with respect to the bulk.
openaire +1 more source