Nucleus-nucleus cross sections and the validity of the factorization hypothesis at intermediate and high energies

Saul Barshay, C. B. Dover, and J. P. Vary
Phys. Rev. C 11, 360 – Published 1 February 1975
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Abstract

We use an impact parameter representation of the scattering amplitude to predict nucleus-nucleus and nucleon-nucleus total, reaction, and elastic cross sections at intermediate and high energies. We investigate the question of factorization for these quantities and find that factorization holds to 20% if the radii of the projectile and target nuclei do not differ by more than 50%. This fact and the gross violation of factorization when the nuclei are very different in size are interpreted in the context of a simple geometric model. The dependence of composite particle cross sections and factorization ratios on the size of the elementary nucleon-nucleon cross section σNNT is investigated. It is shown that strict functional factorization for total and reaction cross sections in the impact parameter scheme only applies in the limit of a "weak" σNNT, for which a single scattering approximation is valid. This situation is not realized in practice, and nucleus-nucleus cross sections are instead found to be close to a geometric limit for all but the lightest nuclei. The energy dependence of nucleus-nucleus cross sections is found to be negligible above 100 MeV/particle.

  • Received 18 April 1974

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.11.360

©1975 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Saul Barshay*

  • State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11790

C. B. Dover and J. P. Vary

  • Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York 11973

  • *Research supported, in part, by the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission under Contract No. AT(11-1)-3001.

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Vol. 11, Iss. 2 — February 1975

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