[d2n-analysis-talk] Hall A Annual Report 2012 [Version 7]

Brad Sawatzky brads at jlab.org
Sat Feb 9 12:31:20 EST 2013


Looking good.

I think I'd add a note to any figures with our preliminary data in them
indicating the corrections that haven't been applied yet.  For example,
Figs 7--10 should have a note mentioning that radiative and positron
corrections are still tentative (or something like that).  A couple of
the figure captions already comment on radicative corrections, and you
already make comments to this effect in the text, so it's really just
making sure that we're consistent about what we're saying in the text
and across all the figures.

-- Brad

On Fri, 08 Feb 2013, David Flay wrote:

> Hi all,
> 
> Here is the updated version of our contribution to the Hall A Status Report:
> 
> https://hallaweb.jlab.org/wiki/images/b/b1/E06014-2012_v7.pdf
> 
> The biggest changes occur in section 1.7 and 1.8, as the only thing that
> has been updated is the discussion of the asymmetries (concerning the
> handling of positron contamination) and their related plots.  Updated
> plots are shown for A1, g1 and g2 as well.  The language of sections 1.7
> and 1.8 has been changed to reflect that we are still working on the
> positron corrections.
> 
> Please let me know of anything that can be improved or added.
> 
> The latest I would like to send this update to Seamus would be Tuesday,
> 2/12/13 at 5PM. I will of course send out an email a day before I plan to
> submit.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> David
> 
> 
> -------------------------------------------------
> David Flay
> Physics Department
> Temple University
> Philadelphia, PA 19122
> 
> office: Barton Hall, BA319
> phone: (215) 204-1331
> 
> e-mail: flay at jlab.org
>             flay at temple.edu
> 
> website: http://www.jlab.org/~flay
>               http://quarks.temple.edu
> -------------------------------------------------
> 
-- 
Brad Sawatzky, PhD <brads at jlab.org>  -<>-  Jefferson Lab / Hall C / C111
Ph: 757-269-5947  -<>-  Fax: 757-269-5235  -<>- Pager: brads-page at jlab.org
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new
  discoveries, is not "Eureka!" but "That's funny..."   -- Isaac Asimov


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