Enhancement of annihilation cross sections by electric interactions between the antineutron and the field of a large nucleus
A. Bianconi, E. Lodi Rizzini, V.Mascagna, and L.Venturelli

TL;DR
This paper investigates how electric interactions, possibly induced by vacuum polarization, could enhance antineutron annihilation cross sections on large nuclei, explaining unexpected experimental observations.
Contribution
It proposes a model where induced electric dipole moments in antineutrons, caused by nuclear electric fields, explain the anomalous cross section behavior.
Findings
Electric polarization strengths needed are consistent with vacuum polarization predictions.
Antineutron cross section rise at low energies can be explained by induced electric dipoles.
Alternative mechanisms involving strong and electromagnetic interactions are discussed.
Abstract
Data relative to antineutron and antiproton annihilation on large nuclei in the range 75-200 MeV/c present two unexpected features: (a) antineutron and antiproton cross sections have a similar size, (ii) the rise of the antineutron cross section at decreasing energy is much steeper than predictable for an inelastic process of purely strong nature at that energy. The observed behavior of antineutron-nucleus annihilations is similar to what would be expected for antiproton-nucleus annihilations, where Coulomb attraction focusses antiproton trajectories towards the nucleus, enhancing the inelastic cross section by a factor O(1/p) with respect to antineutrons on the same target. This results in a 1/p^2 behavior at small energies. The presence of a similar enhancement in the antineutron case may only be justified by an interaction with a longer range than strong interactions. Excluding a…
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