NA35 experiment

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The NA35 experiment was a particle physics experiment that took place in the North Area of the Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) at CERN. It used a streamer chamber with comprehensive hadronic and electromagnetic calorimetry. This experiment was used to observe the properties of nucleus-nucleus collisions at 60 and 200 GeV/nucleon, to understand the degree of stopping and thermalization, determine the energy densities achievable in those conditions, and to measure other related properties and quantities.[1]

The NA35 experiment was approved on 18 September 1991 and completed on 19 October 2002. It was succeeded by the NA49 experiment. The spokesperson for the experiment was Peter Seyboth.[2][3]

See also

  • NA34/3 experiment
  • NA36 experiment
  • NA49 experiment
  • NA61 experiment
  • List of SPS experiments

References

External links

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