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Luminosity (scattering theory)

In scattering theory and accelerator physics, luminosity (L) is the ratio of the number of events detected (N) in a certain time (t) to the interaction cross-section (σ): In scattering theory and accelerator physics, luminosity (L) is the ratio of the number of events detected (N) in a certain time (t) to the interaction cross-section (σ): It has the dimensions of events per time per area, and is usually expressed in the cgs units of cm−2·s−1 or the non-SI units of b−1·s−1. In practice, L is dependent on the particle beam parameters, such as beam width and particle flow rate, as well as the target properties, such as target size and density. A related quantity is integrated luminosity (Lint), which is the integral of the luminosity with respect to time: The luminosity and integrated luminosity are useful values to characterize the performance of a particle accelerator. In particular, all collider experiments aim to maximize their integrated luminosities, as the higher the integrated luminosity, the more data is available to analyze. Here are a few examples of the luminosity of certain accelerators.

[ "Linear particle accelerator", "Particle accelerator", "Large Hadron Collider", "Detector", "Beam crossing", "Crab cavity", "VEPP-2000", "High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider", "lhc upgrade" ]
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