Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Notational conventions
- Errata
- 1 Spin and helicity
- 2 The effect of Lorentz and discrete transformations on helicity states, fields and wave functions
- 3 The spin density matrix
- 4 Transition amplitudes
- 5 The observables of a reaction
- 6 The production of polarized hadrons
- 7 The production of polarized e±
- 8 Analysis of polarized states: polarimetry
- 9 Electroweak interactions
- 10 Quantum chromodynamics: spin in the world of massless partons
- 11 The spin of the nucleon: polarized deep inelastic scattering
- 12 Two-spin and parity-violating single-spin asymmetries at large scale
- 13 One-particle inclusive transverse single-spin asymmetries
- 14 Elastic scattering at high energies
- Appendix 1 The irreducible representation matrices for the rotation group and the rotation functions djλμ(θ)
- Appendix 2 Homogeneous Lorentz transformations and their representations
- Appendix 3 Spin properties of fields and wave equations
- Appendix 4 Transversity amplitudes
- Appendix 5 Common notations for helicity amplitudes
- Appendix 6 The coefficients involved in the parity-invariance relations amongst the dynamical reaction parameters
- Appendix 7 The coefficients involved in the additional invariance constraints on the dynamical reaction parameters for a spin-s particle
- Appendix 8 Symmetry properties of the Cartesian reaction parameters
- Appendix 9 ‘Shorthand’ notation and nomenclature for the Argonne Lab reaction parameters
- Appendix 10 The linearly independent reaction parameters for various reactions and their relation to the helicity amplitudes
- Appendix 11 The Feynman rules for QCD
- Appendix 12 Dirac spinors and matrix elements
- References
- Index
6 - The production of polarized hadrons
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Notational conventions
- Errata
- 1 Spin and helicity
- 2 The effect of Lorentz and discrete transformations on helicity states, fields and wave functions
- 3 The spin density matrix
- 4 Transition amplitudes
- 5 The observables of a reaction
- 6 The production of polarized hadrons
- 7 The production of polarized e±
- 8 Analysis of polarized states: polarimetry
- 9 Electroweak interactions
- 10 Quantum chromodynamics: spin in the world of massless partons
- 11 The spin of the nucleon: polarized deep inelastic scattering
- 12 Two-spin and parity-violating single-spin asymmetries at large scale
- 13 One-particle inclusive transverse single-spin asymmetries
- 14 Elastic scattering at high energies
- Appendix 1 The irreducible representation matrices for the rotation group and the rotation functions djλμ(θ)
- Appendix 2 Homogeneous Lorentz transformations and their representations
- Appendix 3 Spin properties of fields and wave equations
- Appendix 4 Transversity amplitudes
- Appendix 5 Common notations for helicity amplitudes
- Appendix 6 The coefficients involved in the parity-invariance relations amongst the dynamical reaction parameters
- Appendix 7 The coefficients involved in the additional invariance constraints on the dynamical reaction parameters for a spin-s particle
- Appendix 8 Symmetry properties of the Cartesian reaction parameters
- Appendix 9 ‘Shorthand’ notation and nomenclature for the Argonne Lab reaction parameters
- Appendix 10 The linearly independent reaction parameters for various reactions and their relation to the helicity amplitudes
- Appendix 11 The Feynman rules for QCD
- Appendix 12 Dirac spinors and matrix elements
- References
- Index
Summary
Crucial to all the preceding chapters is the assumption that we are able to produce beams and targets of polarized particles and that we are able to analyse the state of polarization of these particles.
In the production of targets and beams we are dealing with stable particles (or at least particles stable on the time scale involved) and the physics involved is basically a mixture of classical and quantum mechanics.
There has been extraordinary progress in the design and construction of polarized proton sources at Argonne and Brookhaven and in the development of highly polarized, radiation-resistant targets of various materials by workers at CERN, Fermilab, HERA, Basel, Virginia, SLAC and Ann Arbor.
Great advances have been made in the resolution of problems involved in the acceleration of polarized protons by groups at Bloomington and at Brookhaven. The electron beams at LEP and at HERA have been successfully polarized and a superb polarized electron source is in use at SLAC.
Also quite remarkable has been the building of secondary and tertiary beams of polarized hyperons at Fermilab. Who would have believed it possible that one can measure the magnetic moment of the Ω–?!
Firstly we shall provide a brief discussion of the physical principles of polarized proton sources and targets and of the problems involved in accelerating beams of polarized protons without loss of polarization.
We also discuss a relatively new development, the attempt to polarize protons and antiprotons via the Stern–Gerlach effect.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Spin in Particle Physics , pp. 129 - 164Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001