1,241,571 research outputs found
Hadronization and final state interaction effects in semi-exclusive Deep Inelastic Scattering off nuclei
Recent calculations of the effects of hadronization and final state
interaction (FSI) in semi-exclusive deep-inelastic scattering (DIS)
processes are reviewed. The basic ingredient underlying these
calculations, {\it viz} the time-dependent effective debris-nucleon cross
section is illustrated, and some relevant results on complex nuclei and the
deuteron are presented. In the latter case, particular attention is paid to the
choice of the kinematics, for such a choice would in principle allow one to
investigate both the structure function of a bound nucleon as well as the
hadronization mechanisms. It is stressed that a planned experiment at Jlab on
the process could be very useful in that respect.Comment: 6 pages, 5 EPS figures. Presented by C. Ciofi degli Atti at the
Fourth International Conference on Hadronic Physics, Trieste (Italy), ICTP
May 12-16, 2003. To appear in EPJ
Scattering analysis of signal degradation and interferences on long and lossy interconnects
A time domain scattering formulation for low-loss nonlinearly loaded multiconductor transmission lines is presented. It is suitable for an efficient and accurate evaluation of crosstalk and field coupling. A simulation of the effects of interference on a long interconnect is give
A theoretical study of elastic X-ray scattering
Bragg X-ray scattering intensities are defined as scattering by the thermodynamic average electron-charge density. Purely elastic, kinematic X-ray scattering by a target in thermal equilibrium is always larger than Bragg scattering. At low temperatures, the elastic scattering becomes Bragg scattering. For large molecules, such as a crystal, at ordinary temperatures the elastic and Bragg scattering differ in a relative sense by O(N-1), where N is the number of vibrational degrees of freedom. For most practical cases the Bragg scattering is essentially the same as purely elastic scattering of X-rays
On the effects of high-order scattering in 3D cubical and rectangular furnaces
The discrete ordinates method (DOM/Sn) is implemented to investigate the high order scattering effects of absorbingāemittingāscattering grey gas media inside the three-dimensional cubical and rectangular furnaces. To validate the numerical method, the furnaces are considered first to be filled with non-scattering grey gases, and the results of the higher order approximations of the DOM show an excellent agreement compared with those available in the literature. The DOM is then extended to apply in the scattering media inside the furnaces, and the results of various scattering approaches such as out-scattering, iso-scattering, linear aniso-scattering and nonlinear aniso-scattering are obtained and presented in this paper
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