2012
DOI: 10.5506/aphyspolb.43.129
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Abstract: In May 1911 Ernest Rutherford published a paper The Scattering of α-and β-particles by Matter and the Structure of the Atom. Now it is usually considered to be the birth certificate of the atomic nucleus. Rutherford's results are presented and discussed in a wider context of physics views of that time.

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Cited by 28 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…The data shows good agreement with approximate KNO scaling. Such observation has been made by other experiments [7,[29][30][31][32]. The fitted curve superimposed on the data results from a parameterisation of Ψ (z ) of the type first introduced by Slattery [33]:…”
Section: Dispersionmentioning
confidence: 64%
“…The data shows good agreement with approximate KNO scaling. Such observation has been made by other experiments [7,[29][30][31][32]. The fitted curve superimposed on the data results from a parameterisation of Ψ (z ) of the type first introduced by Slattery [33]:…”
Section: Dispersionmentioning
confidence: 64%
“…To study whether strangeness has a maximum or not, it is more convenient to plot the Wroblewski factor [22] defined as λ s ≡ 2 ss uū + dd where the quantities in angular brackets refer to the number of newly formed quark-antiquark pairs, i.e. λ s excludes all quarks that were present in the target and the projectile nuclei.…”
Section: Pos(cpod 2009)032mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is considered as constant in energy range which was studied by Orava [8]. There are analyses of experimental data which accept the decrease of strangeness suppression with increase of energy of particle collisions [9,10]. That means the larger values of λ .…”
Section: The K/π Ratio and Strangeness Suppressionmentioning
confidence: 99%