Physics:Quantum data analysis/Scattering Studies: Difference between revisions
Apply Quantum previous-next navigation |
WikiHarold (talk | contribs) Remove stray header marker from Quantum data page |
||
| (7 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Scattering studies in particle-physics data analysis}} | |||
{{Quantum data backlink|Nuts and Bolts}} | {{Quantum data backlink|Nuts and Bolts}} | ||
{{Quantum article nav|previous=Physics:Quantum data analysis/Relativistic Kinematics|previous label=Relativistic Kinematics|next=Physics:Quantum data analysis/Future Experiments|next label=Future Experiments}} | |||
<div style="display:flex; gap:24px; align-items:flex-start; max-width:1200px;"> | <div style="display:flex; gap:24px; align-items:flex-start; max-width:1200px;"> | ||
Latest revision as of 23:43, 23 May 2026
Scattering Studies is a topic in particle-physics data analysis. Scattering studies examine how particles change direction, energy, identity, or multiplicity after interacting. They are the experimental basis for measuring interaction strengths, internal structure, resonances, angular correlations, and quantum numbers. In high-energy physics, scattering is interpreted through amplitudes and cross sections, but measured through reconstructed final states and statistical comparisons. Elastic scattering preserves the identities of the incoming particles, while inelastic scattering produces new final states or excites internal structure. Both types can reveal information about forces, form factors, and interaction ranges. Scattering angles and angular distributions encode spin, parity, exchange particles, and interaction type.
Elastic and inelastic scattering
Elastic scattering preserves the identities of the incoming particles, while inelastic scattering produces new final states or excites internal structure. Both types can reveal information about forces, form factors, and interaction ranges.[1]
Angular information
Scattering angles and angular distributions encode spin, parity, exchange particles, and interaction type. Differential distributions often carry more information than a single event count.[2]
Experimental analysis
A scattering measurement requires event selection, background estimation, acceptance correction, and comparison with theory or simulation. Detector resolution and binning choices can strongly affect the final distribution.[3]
Overview
Scattering Studies is used in particle-physics data analysis to turn detector output, simulated samples, and theoretical models into quantitative physics results. In high-energy experiments the term is connected with event selection, calibration, uncertainty treatment, validation, and comparison with Standard Model or beyond-Standard-Model predictions.
Analysis role
The analysis task is usually defined by the observable being measured or the signal being searched for. A robust workflow keeps raw detector information, reconstructed objects, simulated events, control samples, and statistical models traceable so that assumptions can be checked and systematic uncertainties can be propagated.
Practical considerations
In practice, scattering studies must be documented with selection definitions, units, binning choices, correction factors, and reproducible code or configuration. This makes the result easier to compare across experiments and easier to reinterpret when improved simulations, calibrations, or theoretical predictions become available.[4]
See also
Table of contents (60 articles)
Index
Full contents
References
- ↑ Halzen, Francis; Martin, Alan D. (1984). Quarks and Leptons: An Introductory Course in Modern Particle Physics. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-88741-6.
- ↑ Griffiths, David J. (2008). Introduction to Elementary Particles (2nd ed.). Wiley-VCH. ISBN 978-3-527-40601-2.
- ↑ Cowan, Glen (1998). Statistical Data Analysis. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-850156-5.
- ↑ "Review of Particle Physics". Physical Review D 110 (3): 030001. 2024. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.110.030001.
Source attribution: Physics:Quantum data analysis/Scattering Studies
