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- Timestamp:
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Feb 27, 2020, 6:35:42 PM (5 years ago)
- Author:
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gallmei
- Comment:
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description of the examples
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74 | 74 | }}} |
75 | 75 | |
| 76 | The first example is the decay of the perturbative particle 100030 into the 2 perturbative particles 106451 and 106452 (pion and nucleon). |
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| 78 | The second example is the collision of the perturbative particle 102310 with the real particle (nucleon) 100006 in ensemble 297, producing the two perturbative nucleons 106884 and 106885. |
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76 | 80 | |
77 | 81 | Due to technical reasons, it is not sufficient to just look at the uniqueID of real particles, since this may be repeated in every ensemble. Thus only the combination of ensemble number and unique ID identifies the particle. This is not necessary for perturbative particles. To avoid confusion, here the number of the ensemble is always set to 0. |
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