ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The invariant mass spectra of $phi to K^{+}K^{-}$ are measured in 12 GeV $p+A$ reactions in order to search for the in-medium modification of $phi$ mesons. The observed $K^{+}K^{-}$ spectra are well reproduced by the relativistic Breit-Wigner function with a combinatorial background shape in three $betagamma$ regions between 1.0 and 3.5. The nuclear mass-number dependence of the yields of the $K^{+}K^{-}$ decay channel is compared to the simultaneously measured $e^{+}e^{-}$ decay channel for carbon and copper targets. We parameterize the production yields as $sigma (A) = sigma_0 times A^alpha$ and obtain $alpha_{phito K^+K^-} - alpha_{phito e^+e^-}$ to be 0.14 $pm$ 0.12. Limits are obtained for the partial decay widths of $phi$ mesons in nuclear matter.
The properties of the phi-meson have been measured via its e+e- and K+K- decay channels in Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN} = 200 GeV by the PHENIX experiment. The preliminary yields and temperatures derived for the minimum bias and several centrality bins in both decay channels are presented.
We measure the Born cross sections of the process $e^{+}e^{-} to K^{+}K^{-}K^{+}K^{-}$ at center-of-mass (c.m.) energies, $sqrt{s}$, between 2.100 and 3.080 GeV. The data were collected using the BESIII detector at the BEPCII collider. An enhancement
Using a data sample of $448.1times10^6$ $psi(3686)$ events collected at $sqrt{s}=$ 3.686 GeV with the BESIII detector at the BEPCII, we search for the rare decay $J/psi to phi e^+ e^-$ via $psi(3686) to pi^+pi^- J/psi $. No signal events are observed
Using 2.92 fb$^{-1}$ of electron-positron annihilation data collected at a center-of-mass energy of $sqrt{s}= 3.773$ GeV with the BESIII detector, we present an improved measurement of the branching fraction $mathcal{B}(D^+ to omega e^+ u_{e}) = (1.
The cross sections of the processes $e^+e^- to K^+K^-$, $e^+e^- to K_SK_L$ and $e^+e^- to pi^+pi^-pi^0$ were measured in the SND experiment at the VEPP-2M collider in the energy region near the $phi(1020)$ meson. These measurements were based on abou