James Bond
The polarization of neutrons elastically scattered from 4He at laboratory angles of 20°, 40°, 60°, 80° , and 110° has been measured as continuous function of neutron energy between 1.5 and 6.0 MeV, using a double-scattering technique. The primary intense flux of unpolarized neutrons was generated at the Yale University Electron Linear Accelerator by the photodisintegration of natural lead. A fraction of these neutrons was elastically scattered at 50° (lab) from a graphite cylinder along a 27 m flight path. This polarized beam then impinged on a target of liquid helimn, and neutrons scattered by the helium were detected in an array of scintillation counters. The absolute polarization of the neutron beam was measured in a separate, true double-scattering experiment. Neutron energies were determined with good resolution using a nanosecond time-of-flight spectrometer. The generalized neutron spin precession method was used to reduce systematic uncertainties to negligible amounts. The polarization measurements were analyzed using a multilevel R-matrix reaction theory and, from this, neutron total and differential cross sections and polarizations were predicted. The predictions were compared with the results of other recent measurements and analyses and with the results of various theoretical models of the 5He system. A definitive, self-consistent set of phase shifts was obtained for the n-4He interaction in the energy region below 10 MeV.