ABSTRACT

The Workshop was also summarized at the Quark Matter ‘84 meeting in Helsinki this last June. For additional information on detector requirements for high energy nuclear collisions, consult the talks of T. Ludlam, H. Specht, and A. Sandoval given at this Conference. A device measuring hadrons in the final state would detect hadrons arising from ordinary hadronization processes found, for example, in nucleon-nucleon collisions and hadrons produced by quark and gluon recombination processes in the plasma phase. Efforts were directed at systems designed to detect directly produced electromagnetic probes in light ion collisions over the energy range of 15-225 GeV/nucleon. The group suggests that a system like the European Hybrid Spectrometer which uses a series of dispersing dipoles spaced along the beam line would possibly be a better solution.