Posted: Mar 09, 2010 5:41 pm
by crank
Can someone explain an inverse femptobarn? I knew a barn was a unit of area used in nuclear thingies, but an inverse femptobarn as a unit of information/data?--"With an inverse femtobarn of data" or "An inverse femtobarn at the LHC pushes that up to about 800 GeV"?????

A barn (symbol b) is a unit of area. Originally used in nuclear physics for expressing the cross sectional area of nuclei and nuclear reactions, today it is used in all fields of high energy physics to express the cross sections of any scattering process. A barn is defined as 10−28 m2 or 100 square femtometers (fm2) and is approximately the cross sectional area of a uranium nucleus. The barn is also the unit of area used in nuclear quadrupole resonance and nuclear magnetic resonance to quantify the interaction of a nucleus with an electric field gradient. While the barn is not an SI unit, it is accepted for use with the SI due to its continued use in particle physics.[1] It is one of the very few units which are accepted to be used with SI units, and one of the most recent units to have been established (cf. the knot and the bar, other non-SI units acceptable in limited circumstances).[2]