Nuclear Collision Length
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Nuclear Collision Length
Nuclear collision length is the mean free path of a particle before undergoing a nuclear reaction, for a given particle in a given medium. The collision length is smaller than the nuclear interaction length because the latter excludes the elastic and quasi-elastic (diffractive) reactions from its definition. See also *Nuclear interaction length Nuclear interaction length is the mean distance travelled by a hadronic particle before undergoing an inelastic nuclear interaction. See also * Nuclear collision length * Radiation length External linksParticle Data Group site Experimental parti ... * Radiation length External links *http://ikpe1101.ikp.kfa-juelich.de/briefbook_part_detectors/node30.html Experimental particle physics {{nuclear-stub ...
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Nuclear Reaction
In nuclear physics and nuclear chemistry, a nuclear reaction is a process in which two nuclei, or a nucleus and an external subatomic particle, collide to produce one or more new nuclides. Thus, a nuclear reaction must cause a transformation of at least one nuclide to another. If a nucleus interacts with another nucleus or particle and they then separate without changing the nature of any nuclide, the process is simply referred to as a type of nuclear scattering, rather than a nuclear reaction. In principle, a reaction can involve more than two particles colliding, but because the probability of three or more nuclei to meet at the same time at the same place is much less than for two nuclei, such an event is exceptionally rare (see triple alpha process for an example very close to a three-body nuclear reaction). The term "nuclear reaction" may refer either to a change in a nuclide induced by collision with another particle or to a spontaneous change of a nuclide without ...
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Nuclear Interaction Length
Nuclear interaction length is the mean distance travelled by a hadronic particle before undergoing an inelastic nuclear interaction. See also * Nuclear collision length * Radiation length External linksParticle Data Group site Experimental particle physics {{Nuclear-stub ...
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Nuclear Interaction Length
Nuclear interaction length is the mean distance travelled by a hadronic particle before undergoing an inelastic nuclear interaction. See also * Nuclear collision length * Radiation length External linksParticle Data Group site Experimental particle physics {{Nuclear-stub ...
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Radiation Length
In physics, the radiation length is a characteristic of a material, related to the energy loss of high energy particles electromagnetically interacting with it. Definition In materials of high atomic number (e.g. W, U, Pu) the electrons of energies >~10 MeV predominantly lose energy by bremsstrahlung, and high-energy photons by pair production. The characteristic amount of matter traversed for these related interactions is called the radiation length , usually measured in g·cm−2. It is both the mean distance over which a high-energy electron loses all but of its energy by bremsstrahlung, and of the mean free path for pair production by a high-energy photon. It is also the appropriate length scale for describing high-energy electromagnetic cascades. The radiation length for a given material consisting of a single type of nucleus can be approximated by the following expression: (http://pdg.lbl.gov/) X_0 = 716.4\;\mathrm g\, \mathrm^ \frac = 1433 \;\mathrm g\, \mathrm^ \fr ...
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