: Proposed experimental geometry
 : Proposed experiment
 : Experimental goals
In the proposed experiment, the followings were taken into account
to optimize experimental conditions for high-resolution and high efficiency 
hypernuclear spectroscopy.
- As shown in Fig. 6 and Fig. 7, angular distributions
   of virtual photons and kaons in the (e,e'K
) reaction is forward peaked
   and thus both the electron and the kaon spectrometer should be positioned 
   at as forward angles as possible.
 
- The virtual photons at 0 degrees have the energy, E
, 
is given as,
  
  | 
(1) | 
 
where E
 and E
 are beam and scattered electron energies.
   The elementary cross section of the (
,K
) reaction has
   relatively weak 
 dependence above the threshold.
 
- Once the energy of virtual photon is fixed, outcoming K
 momentum is given
  assuming hypernuclear mass.   P
 is about 1 GeV/c for 
  E
 = 1.8 - 0.3 = 1.5 GeV where the scattered electron energy is assumed
  to be 0.3 GeV as an example.
   Photon energy effective for the production of kaons will have a range that corresponds to 
   the energy acceptance of the electron spectrometer. Thus, the momentum acceptance of
   the kaon spectrometer and the electron spectrometer should match each other.
 
- Maximum kaon momentum to be detected should be optimized considering
	
- Yield of hypernuclei
 
- Energy resolution and acceptance of the spectrometer.
   			Naturally, the energy resolution becomes worse with higher momentum.
 
- Particle identification, particularly between pions and kaons.		
 
- Size of the kaon spectrometer and consequently construction cost.
     
 
 
- For the yield of 
 hypernuclei, three factors contribute,
          
- The elementary cross section of p(
,K
)
 is almost constant
 for the energy range of real 
 from 1.1 - 2.0 GeV.  Corresponding kaon
 momentum is from 
 0.7-1.6 GeV/c.  However, the hypernuclear cross sections
 get greater with the higher 
 energy because the recoil momentum becomes smaller.
 
- With higher kaon momentum, the survival rate of the kaon becomes higher 
 for the given flight path of the spectrometer.
 
- With higher kaon momentum, the cone of scattered kaons becomes narrower.
 Thus, larger fraction of the hypernuclei produced in the reaction will be
 captured for the same solid angle if the spectrometer is positioned 
 at or close to 0 degrees.
          
 
The figure of merit as a function of electron energy assuming the scattered electron
  energy is 0.285 GeV is shown in Fig. 8.  
  It is shown the higher the energy of 
  the electron beam, the larger the yield of the hypernuclear ground states for a given
  spectrometer configuration.  
 
- Although the hypernuclear yield is expected to increase with beam energy,
   reaction channels strangeness production other than a 
   hyperon open at higher energy and will become sources of background,
   because that bremsstrahlung photons up to the beam energy are produced 
   in the targets.
   The electron beam energy is better kept as low as possible from the points
   of background and particle identification.
 
- Taking into account above conditions, the optimum kaon momentum 
   is set at 1.2 GeV/c aiming 2 
 10
 momentum resolution.  
   The momentum resolution corresponds to about 100 keV energy resolution 
   in hypernuclear excitation spectra.
 
- The electron spectrometer also should have momentum resolution of 
 3 
 10
,
   matching that of the kaon spectrometer.  Since the momentum of scattered electron
   is low compared to that of kaons, better momentum resolution can be achieved.
 
 
 
   
 : Proposed experimental geometry
 : Proposed experiment
 : Experimental goals
Satoshi N. Nakamura
平成16年12月2日