Centre of mass energy in the p+p collision

Wenchao.Zhang
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Hi, experts
I got a very naive question.
I read the following sentence in a paper: "New results on the production of charged pions in p+p interactions are presented. The data come from a sample of 4.8 million inelastic events obtained with the NA49 detector at the CERN SPS at 158 GeV/c beam momentum". (see the abstract of DOI:10.1140/epjc/s2005-02391-9)
Then it says that the the centre of mass energy is 17.3 GeV. It is really hard for me to get this conclusion. Could sb. gives me some hint?
Best wishes
W.
 
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For a collision between two particles of equal mass M, the relationship is s = Ecm2 = 2M2 + 2M Elab where s is the usual Lorentz invariant.

So M = 1 GeV and Elab = 158 GeV gives you Ecm = √318 = 17.8 GeV
 
That's a beam target collision I suppose. Try using 4-vectos. I get the formula E_{CM}=\sqrt{2m(E_L+m)}, where ECM is the center of mass energy, EL is the Energy of the incoming proton in the LAB reference frame, and m is the mass of the proton.
 
dauto said:
That's a beam target collision I suppose. Try using 4-vectos. I get the formula E_{CM}=\sqrt{2m(E_L+m)}, where ECM is the center of mass energy, EL is the Energy of the incoming proton in the LAB reference frame, and m is the mass of the proton.
I couldn't have said it better myself. :wink:
 
Thanks for the replies. I think I got the answer. Say the four vector of the incoming proton in the lab frame is p1=(E_lab,0,0, p_z), the four vector for the rest proton is p2=(M,0,0,0), then s should be equal to (E_lab+M)^2-(p_z)^2=2M^2+2E_lab*M. Thanks a lot.
 
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