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The Glauber multiple scattering theory[1][2] is a framework developed by Roy J. Glauber to describe the scattering of particles off composite targets, such as nuclei, in terms of multiple interactions between the probing particle and the individual constituents of the target. It is widely used[3] in high-energy physics, nuclear physics, and hadronic physics, where quantum coherence effects and multiple scatterings are significant.
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