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 to 2.0 GeV.  Corresponding kaon
 momentum is from 0.7 to 1.6 GeV/
.  However, the hypernuclear cross sections
 get larger with the higher 
 energy because the recoil momentum becomes smaller.
 
- With higher kaon momentum, the survival rate of the kaon becomes higher 
 for a given flight path of the spectrometer.
 
- With higher kaon momentum, the angular spread of the scattered kaons is smaller.
 Therefore, a larger portion of the hypernuclei produced in the reaction will be
 captured for a given solid angle when the spectrometer is positioned 
 at or close to 0 degree.
          
 
In Figure 3, the figure of merit as a function of electron energy 
is given, in the case the scattered electron energy is 0.285 GeV. 
  It is shown that the higher the energy of 
  the electron beam, the larger yield of the hypernuclear ground states is obtained for a given
  spectrometer configuration.