Difference between revisions of "Elong-13-09-12"
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--[[User:Ellie|E. Long]] 15:51, 12 September 2013 (UTC) | --[[User:Ellie|E. Long]] 15:51, 12 September 2013 (UTC) |
Revision as of 14:23, 13 September 2013
Adding QE Range
Frankfurt and Strikman's 1988 Azz
In their 1988 report on Hard Nuclear Processes and Microscopic Structure, Fig. 7.7 plots what appears to be Azz.
I took this plot and super-imposed it onto a plot in a spreadsheet so that I could estimate points along the curve.
Each of these points, with an uncertainty of ±0.01 on account of my estimating from a previous work without direct points, was then put into a graph in ROOT and fit with a 6th-order polynomial, <math>\sum_{n=0}^6w_n\cdot x^n</math>
<math>n</math> <math>w_n</math> 0 -5.68296e+01 ± 1.22251e-02 1 2.46102e+02 ± 1.66137e-02 2 -3.51484e+02 ± 1.39410e-02 3 1.11641e+02 ± 1.11237e-02 4 1.63698e+02 ± 8.63783e-03 5 -1.48174e+02 ± 6.15266e-03 6 3.50491e+01 ± 3.63922e-03
This fit was written up as a subroutine for the b1 rates code. It also assumes that at x>1.425, Azz=1 and that at x<0.75, Azz=0. The b1 rates code was then updated to use the previous Kumano curves for x<0.75 and this new QE curve for x>=0.75.
Q2 Scan
Starting with x=0.5, 0.75, 1.0, and 1.25 and including the Frankfurt and Strikman plot for Azz in the Quasi-Elastic range, I scanned over Q^2 looking for the best rates that fall within the spectrometers' limits.
--E. Long 15:51, 12 September 2013 (UTC)