Muon Physics 1975
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-360603-7.50009-4
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Depolarization of Negative Muons and Interaction of Mesonic Atoms With the Medium

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Cited by 12 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…However, even if negative muons in the beam are 100% spin polarized, they are depolarized during their atomic cascades down to the 1s ground state. For a nucleus with zero nuclear spin, the residual polarization is about 16% (Evseev, 1975). For a nucleus with non-zero nuclear spin, it becomes much smaller.…”
Section: Event Signature and Backgroundsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…However, even if negative muons in the beam are 100% spin polarized, they are depolarized during their atomic cascades down to the 1s ground state. For a nucleus with zero nuclear spin, the residual polarization is about 16% (Evseev, 1975). For a nucleus with non-zero nuclear spin, it becomes much smaller.…”
Section: Event Signature and Backgroundsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In order to reconcile theory with experiment on muonic Auger effect, de Borde proposed that the intial atomic capture takes place predominantly into states of low angular momentum. Many problems are related to the initial population as, for instance, in the case of muons, the residual polarization after the atomic deexcitation [6]; in this case, depending on the initial distribution over the angular momentum l, the captured muon will make dipole transitions towards lower l values (retaining its polarization) or towards higher l values (losing polarization) [7]. It is well known that, starting from the statistical distribution which gives the largest probability that the muon be captured into the l=n-1 state, one can establish the "1/6" law for the muon residual polarization [8,9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, even if negative muons in the beam are 100 % polarized, they are depolarized during their atomic cascades down to the 1 s ground state. There is a small residual polarization, of about 15 % [36] in nuclei with zero spin, but is much smaller when nuclei carry spin. They must be re-polarized, and one way is to have a polarized nucleus target [37,38].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%