We present the final report from a series of precision measurements of the muon anomalous magnetic moment, a µ = (g − 2)/2. The details of the experimental method, apparatus, data taking, and analysis are summarized. Data obtained at Brookhaven National Laboratory, using nearly equal samples of positive and negative muons, were used to deduce a µ (Expt) = 11 659 208.0(5.4)(3.3) × 10 −10 , where the statistical and systematic uncertainties are given, respectively. The combined uncertainty of 0.54 ppm represents a 14-fold improvement compared to previous measurements at CERN. The standard model value for a µ includes contributions from virtual QED, weak, and hadronic processes. While the QED processes account for most of the anomaly, the largest theoretical uncertainty, ≈ 0.55 ppm, is associated with first-order hadronic vacuum polarization. Present standard model evaluations, based on e + e − hadronic cross sections, lie 2.2 -2.7 standard deviations below the experimental result.
Identified pi(+/-), K(+/-), p, and (-)p transverse momentum spectra at midrapidity in sqrt[s(NN)] = 130 GeV Au+Au collisions were measured by the PHENIX experiment at RHIC as a function of collision centrality. Average transverse momenta increase with the number of participating nucleons in a similar way for all particle species. Within errors, all midrapidity particle yields per participant are found to be increasing with the number of participating nucleons. There is an indication that K(+/-), p, and (-)p yields per participant increase faster than the pi(+/-) yields. In central collisions at high transverse momenta (p(T) > or =2 GeV/c), (-)p and p yields are comparable to the pi(+/-) yields.
An experiment on the decay K '-a'a-e'v was performed at the CERN proton synctirutron with sparkchamber and counter techniques. The IS, branching ratio has been measured relative to the T decay. The ax phase-shift difference 6: -61 and the form factors of the hadronic current have been determined as functions of the n a energy. The xa scattering length a : has been evaluated from the phase shifts with a phenomenological model. The results are compared with the theoretical predictions of current algebra and other models.
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