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PRECISION MEASUREMENTS OF DEUTERON PHOTODISINTEGRATION USING LINEARLY POLARIZED PHOTONS OF 14 AND 16 MEV

A precision measurement of the d(gamma
,n)p reaction was performed at the High
Intensity
gamma-ray Source (HIGS), which is located at the Duke Free Electron Laser
Laboratory on the campus of Duke University. The
gamma-ray beams were nearly 100%
linearly polarized, allowing the angular distributions of both the analyzing power
and unpolarized cross section to be measured at 14 and 16 MeV. The photons were
incident on a heavy water target and the neutrons from the photodisintegration
reaction were detected using the Blowfish detector array, which consists of 88 liquid
scintillator detectors with large angular coverage.A transition matrix element (TME) analysis was performed on the data which
allowed the amplitudes of the TMEs which contribute to the reaction at these energies
to be extracted. This was done by invoking Watson's theorem, which fixes the relative
TME phases using the n-p scattering phase shifts, leaving the TME amplitudes as
free parameters in fits to the data. The results indicated very good agreement with
a recent potential model calculation for the amplitudes of the three electric dipole
(E1) p-waves, which account for over 90% of the cross section at these energies.The extracted TME amplitudes were then used to construct the observable which
enters into the Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn (GDH) Sum Rule integrand. The results are
the first experimental indication of a positive value of the GDH integrand in the
region near photodisintegration threshold. A positive value at these energies has
been shown by theory to be due to relativistic contributions. / Dissertation

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:DUKE/oai:dukespace.lib.duke.edu:10161/375
Date27 July 2007
CreatorsBlackston, Matthew Allen
ContributorsWeller, Henry R
Source SetsDuke University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
Format3264816 bytes, application/pdf

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