Total Cross Sections
The SigmaTotal
class returns the total, elastic, diffractive
and nondiffractive cross sections in hadronic collisions, and also the
slopes of the d(sigma)/dt distributions. The parametrizations
used are from [Sch94, Sch97] which borrows some of the total cross
sections from [Don92].
There are strong indications that the currently implemented diffractive
cross section parametrizations, which should be in reasonable agreement
with data at lower energies, overestimate the diffractive rate at larger
values. If you wish to explore this (or other) aspect, it is possible to
override the cross section values in two different ways. The first offers
(almost) complete freedom, but needs to be defined separately for each
CM energy, while the second introduces a simpler parametrized damping.
The two cannot be combined. Furthermore the Coulomb term for elastic
scattering, which by default is off, can be switched on.
The allowed combinations of incoming particles are p + p,
pbar + p, pi+ + p, pi- + p,
pi0/rho0 + p, phi + p, J/psi + p,
rho + rho, rho + phi, rho + J/psi,
phi + phi, phi + J/psi, J/psi + J/psi.
The strong emphasis on vector mesons is related to the description
of gamma + p and gamma + gamma interactions in a
Vector Dominance Model framework (which will not be available for some
time to come, so this is a bit of overkill). Nevertheless, the sections
below, with allowed variations, are mainly intended to make sense for
p + p.
Set cross sections
flag
SigmaTotal:setOwn
(default = off
)
Allow a user to set own cross sections by hand; on/off = true/false.
When SigmaTotal:setOwn = on
, the user is expected to set
values for the corresponding cross sections:
parm
SigmaTotal:sigmaTot
(default = 80.
; minimum = 0.
)
Total cross section in mb.
parm
SigmaTotal:sigmaEl
(default = 20.
; minimum = 0.
)
Elastic cross section in mb.
parm
SigmaTotal:sigmaXB
(default = 8.
; minimum = 0.
)
Single Diffractive cross section A + B -> X + B in mb.
parm
SigmaTotal:sigmaAX
(default = 8.
; minimum = 0.
)
Single Diffractive cross section A + B -> A + X in mb.
parm
SigmaTotal:sigmaXX
(default = 4.
; minimum = 0.
)
Double Diffractive cross section A + B -> X_1 + X_2 in mb.
Note that the total cross section subtracted by the elastic and various
diffractive ones gives the inelastic nondiffractive cross section,
which therefore is not set separately. If this cross section evaluates
to be negative the internal parametrizations are used instead of the
ones here. However, since the nondiffractive inelastic cross section
is what makes up the minimum-bias event class, and plays a major role
in the description of multiple interactions, it is important that a
consistent set is used.
Dampen diffractive cross sections
flag
SigmaDiffractive:dampen
(default = no
)
Allow a user to dampen diffractive cross sections; on/off = true/false.
When SigmaDiffractive:dampen = on
, the three diffractive
cross sections are damped so that they never can exceed the respective
values below. Specifically, if the standard parametrization gives
the cross section sigma_old(s) and a fixed sigma_max
is set, the actual cross section becomes sigma_new(s)
= sigma_old(s) * sigma_max / (sigma_old(s) + sigma_max).
This reduces to sigma_old(s) at low energies and to
sigma_max at high ones. Note that the asymptotic value
is approached quite slowly, however.
parm
SigmaDiffractive:maxXB
(default = 15.
; minimum = 0.
)
The above sigma_max for A + B -> X + B in mb.
parm
SigmaDiffractive:maxAX
(default = 15.
; minimum = 0.
)
The above sigma_max for A + B -> X + B in mb.
parm
SigmaDiffractive:maxXX
(default = 15.
; minimum = 0.
)
The above sigma_max for A + B -> X + B in mb.
As above, a reduced diffractive cross section automatically translates
into an increased nondiffractive one, such that the total (and elastic)
cross section remains fixed.
Set elastic cross section
In the above option the t slopes are based on the internal
parametrizations. In addition there is no Coulomb-term contribution
to the elastic (or total) cross section, which of course becomes
infinite if this contribution is included. If you have switched on
SigmaTotal:setOwn
you can further switch on a machinery
to include the Coulomb term, including interference with the conventional
strong-interaction Pomeron one [Ber87]. Then the elastic cross
section is no longer taken from SigmaTotal:sigmaEl
but
derived from the parameters below and SigmaTotal:sigmaTot
,
using the optical theorem. The machinery is only intended to be used for
p p and pbar p collisions. The description of
diffractive events, and especially their slopes, remains unchanged.
flag
SigmaElastic:setOwn
(default = no
)
Allow a user to set parameters for the normalization and shape of the
elastic cross section the by hand; yes/no = true/false.
parm
SigmaElastic:bSlope
(default = 18.
; minimum = 0.
)
the slope b of the strong-interaction term exp(bt),
in units of GeV^-2.
parm
SigmaElastic:rho
(default = 0.13
; minimum = -1.
; maximum = 1.
)
the ratio of the real to the imaginary parts of the nuclear scattering
amplitude.
parm
SigmaElastic:lambda
(default = 0.71
; minimum = 0.1
; maximum = 2.
)
the main parameter of the electric form factor
G(t) = lambda^2 / (lambda + |t|)^2, in units of GeV^2.
parm
SigmaElastic:tAbsMin
(default = 5e-5
; minimum = 1e-10
)
since the Coulomb contribution is infinite a lower limit on
|t| must be set to regularize the divergence,
in units of GeV^2.
parm
SigmaElastic:phaseConst
(default = 0.577
)
The Coulomb term is taken to contain a phase factor
exp(+- i alpha phi(t)), with + for p p and - for
pbar p, where phi(t) = - phaseConst - ln(-B t/2).
This constant is model dependent [Cah82].