Nucleon-nucleus inelastic scattering using a relativistic impulse approximation with exchange
- 1 February 1987
- journal article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review C
- Vol. 35 (2) , 681-690
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevc.35.681
Abstract
We formulate a microscopic relativistic treatment of nucleon-nucleus inelastic scattering in a distorted wave impulse approximation. The interaction is taken from a Lorentz invariant formulation with explicit direct and exchange terms constrained by fitting to experimental NN amplitudes. This procedure allows us to apply the theory in the lower range of intermediate energies (100–400 MeV) where exchange effects are likely to be important. Application to inelastic scattering uses this interaction for both the distorting potentials and the transition interaction. Effects of explicit exchange are studied and a preliminary analysis of (p,p’) data is presented.
Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relativistic plane-wave impulse approximation for nuclear inelastic scattering of protons and electronsPhysical Review C, 1986
- Relativistic Love-Franey model: Covariant representation of the NN interaction for N-nucleus scatteringPhysical Review C, 1985
- Microscopic relativistic nucleon-nucleus inelastic scatteringPhysical Review C, 1984
- Impulse approximation Dirac theory of inelastic proton nucleus collective excitationsPhysical Review C, 1984
- Impulse-Approximation Dirac Optical PotentialPhysical Review Letters, 1983
- Relativistic Impulse Approximation for-Nucleus Elastic ScatteringPhysical Review Letters, 1983
- Dirac optical model analysis ofelastic scattering at 180 MeV and the wine-bottle-bottom shapePhysical Review C, 1981
- Relativistic optical model analysis of medium energy-elastic scattering experimentsPhysical Review C, 1979
- Multipole expansion of a two-body interaction in helicity formalism and its applications to nuclear structure and nuclear reaction calculationsNuclear Physics A, 1967
- Polarization of Fast NucleonsAnnual Review of Nuclear Science, 1956