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24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10. Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold . 2. 9.0 Overview. 9.1 Introduction9.2 Charged particles in matter Classification of interactionsNon-radiating interactions (ionisation)Radiating interactionsIonisation and the Bethe-Bloch formula (BBF) End of lecture 9Radiating interactionsCherenkov-radiationBremsstrahlungSynchrotron-radiationThe em-shower.
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1. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 1 Lectures 9-10 Particle interactions with matter
2. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 2 9.0 Overview 9.1 Introduction
9.2 Charged particles in matter
Classification of interactions
Non-radiating interactions (ionisation)
Radiating interactions
Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch formula (BBF)
End of lecture 9
Radiating interactions
Cherenkov-radiation
Bremsstrahlung
Synchrotron-radiation
The em-shower
3. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 3 12.1 Introduction(why do we need to know this) Measure properties of nuclei through decay products
Measure energy, momentum, mass & charge of particles with
M ? [0 (g) ; few 100 GeV (fission fragment)]
Ekin ? [keV (Radioactivity) ; few GeV (accelerator experiments)]
Q/e ? [0 (g,n); O(100) (fission fragments)]
Need to translate microscopic particle properties into quantitatively measurable macroscopic signals
Do this by interactions between particles and matter
Which interactions would be useful?
Weak? ? Too weak at low (nuclear) interaction energies
Strong? ? Some times useful but often noisy (strong fluctuations, few interactions per distance)
EM? ? Underlies most nuclear and particle physics detectors (L9&10)
Energies released = Ekin(particle) often too small for direct detection ? need amplification of signals (see detector section L11)
4. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 4 12.1 Introduction Particle Ranges
If smooth energy loss via many steps (i.e. ionisation from light ions)
? sharply defined range, useful for rough energy measurement
5. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 5 12.1 Introduction
6. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 6 12.2 Charged particles in matter(classification of interactions) If particle or medium emit photons, coherent with incoming particle ? radiation process
Bremsstrahlung, Synchrotron-radiation: emitted by particle
Cherenkov-radiation: emittted by medium
If no coherent radiation ? non-radiating process
Ionisation, scattering of nuclei or atoms
Note: Scintillation is a secondary process in which the light is emitted after ionisation or atomic excitation. It is NOT a radiation process
7. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 7 12.2 Charged particles in matter(non radiating interactions, what to collide with) What could a charged particle collide with
Atomic electrons (free)
? large energy loss DEq2/2me (small me, q=momentum transfer)
? small scattering angle
Nuclei
? small energy loss (DE=q2/2mnucleus)
? large scattering angle
Unresolved atoms (predominant at low energies)
? medium energy loss DE<q2/2meeff because: meeff(bound)>me(free)
? medium scattering angle
? atoms get excited and will later emit photons (scintillation)
8. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 8 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula) Deal with collisions with electrons first since these give biggest energy loss.
Task: compute rate of energy loss per path length, dE/dx due to scattering of a charged particle from electrons in matter.
Remember a similar problem?
Scatter alpha particles of nuclei = Rutherford scattering
9. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 9 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Comparison between Rutherford Scattering and EM-scattering of free electrons) Rutherford Scattering
any charged particle X (original used as) scatters of nucleus
Charge(X)=Ze
Charge(nucleus)=Ze
Mnucl >> MX ? no nuclear-recoil
first order perturbation theory (Z*Z*aem<<1)
point ? point scattering
? no form-factors Bethe-Bloch situation
any charged particle X scatters of electron (in matter)
Charge(X)=Ze
Charge(electron)=1e
MX >> Me ? no X-recoil (not true for X=e-)
first order perturbation theory (Z*1*aem<<1)
point ? point scattering
? no form-factors
10. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 10 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Comparison between Rutherford Scattering and EM-scattering of free electrons) Will initially ignore the spin and relativistic effects when deriving first parts of Bethe Bloch formula
Start with Rutherford like scattering using electron as projectile
Later introduce more realistic scattering crossection (Mott) to get full Bethe Bloch formula
Add effects for bound electrons at the end
11. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 11 12.2 Charged particles in matter(From Rutherford Scattering to the Bethe-Bloch Formula) Differential Rutherford-scattering crossection for electrons as projectiles
12. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 12 12.2 Charged particles in matter(normal Rutherford Scattering: e- on nucleus, change of variables) Change variables from W to q2 (q = momentum transfer to electron) to get to frame independent form
13. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 13 12.2 Charged particles in matter(normal Rutherford Scattering: e- on nucleus, change of variables)
14. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 14 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Rutherford Scattering, change of frame to nucleus on e) Change frame to:
electron stationary (in matter), nucleus moving with V towards electron
p in formula is still momentum of electron moving with relative V ? p =megV
q2 is frame independent
non-relativistic this is obvious (do it at home)
Energy transfer to the electron is defined via:
DE=n=|q2|/2me ? dn/dq2=1/2me
relativistic need to define q as 4-momentum transfer, but we assume non relativistic for Rutherford anyway.
15. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 15 Above is crossection for a non relativistic heavy particle of charge z to loose energy between n and n+dn in collision with a spin-less electron it approaches with velocity V
We want as a useful quantity:
kinetic energy lost by projectile = -dT
per path length dx
in material of atomic number density n
with Z electrons per atom 12.2 Charged particles in matter(From inverse Rutherford scattering to the Bethe-Bloch Formula)
16. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 16 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula, simple integral) Two of our assumptions justifying the use of Rutherford scattering were:
Electrons in matter have no spin
Projectile travels at non relativistic speed
None of these are met in practise
We have to do all of the last 5 slides again starting from a relativistic crossection for spin ½ electrons.
17. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 17 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula, Mott) Differential Mott-scattering crossection for relativistic spin ½ electrons scattering off a finite mass nucleus (finite mass ? e- could be target)
18. 18 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula, Mott integral)
19. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 19 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula, nmin) But what about nmin ?
can not assume that e is free for small energy transfers
n?q2/2me because electron bound to atom
can get excited atoms in final state (not just ions)
? our integral was wrong for the lower limit! (cant get from first to second line on slide 15 any more)
For small n need 2-D integral dn dq depending on detailed atomic structure
We need to find some average description of the atomic structure depending only on Z and A if we want to find a universal formula
This gives sizable fraction of integral but is very hard to do
The result is the Bethe-Bloch Formula
20. 20 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula = BBF) Stopping power = mean energy lost by ionisation upon perpendicularly traversing a layer of unit mass per area.
Units: Mev g-1 cm2, Range: 4.1 in H to 1.1 in U
I=mean excitation energy; depends on atom type, I11*Z [eV]
21. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 21 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula, Bethe-Bloch features) d=density correction: dielectric properties of medium shield growing range of Lorenz-compacted E-field that would reach more atoms laterally. Without this the stopping power would logarithmically diverge at large projectile velocities. Only relevant at very large bg
BBF as a Function of bg is nearly independent of M of projectile except for nmax and very weak log dependence in d
? if you know p and measure b ? get M (particle ID via dE/dx): See slide 23
Nearly independent of medium. Dominant dependence is Z/A ½ for most elements.
Limitations:
totally wrong for very low V (ln goes negative ? particle gains Energy = stupid)
correct but not useful for very large V (particle starts radiating, see next chapter)
22. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 22 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula, variation with bg) Broad minimum @ bg3.0(3.5) for Z=100(7)
At minimum, stopping power is nearly independent of particle type and material
23. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 23 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Ionisation and the Bethe-Bloch Formula, variation with particle type) P=mgv=mgbc
variation in dE/dx is useful for particle ID
variation is most pronounced in low energy falling part of curve
if you measured P and dE/dx you can determine the particle mass and thus its name
24. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 24 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Radiating Interactions) Emission of scintillation light is secondary process occurring later in time.
Has no phase coherence with the incident charge and is isotropic and thus SCINTILLATION NOT A RADIATING INTERACTION in this sense.
Primary radiation processes which are coherent and not isotropic are:
Cherenkov radiation is emitted by the medium due to the passing charged particle.
Bremsstrahlung and Synchrotron Radiation are emitted by charged particle itself as result of its environment.
25. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 25 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Cherenkov Radiation) Source of E-field (Q) passing through medium at a v > vphase(light in medium) creates conical shock wave. Like sonic boom or bow wave of a planing speed boat.
Not possible in vacuum since v<c. Possible in a medium when v>c/n.
The Cerencov threshold at ? = 1/n can be used to measure b and thus do particle ID if you can measure the momentum as well.
Huygens secondary wavelet construction gives angle of shockwave as cos? = 1/?n, This can be used to measure particle direction and b.
26. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 26 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Cherenkov Radiation) Picture of Cherenkov light emitted by beta decay electrons in a working water cooled nuclear reactor.
27. 27 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Bremsstrahlung = BS = Brake-ing Radiation) Due to acceleration of incident charged particle in nuclear Coulomb field
Radiative correction to Rutherford Scattering.
Continuum part of x-ray emission spectra.
Electrons Brem most of all particles because
radiation ~ (acceleration)2 ~ mass-2.
Lorentz transformation of dipole radiation from incident particle frame to laboratory frame gives narrow (not sharp) cone of blue-shifted radiation centred around cone angle of ?=1/?.
Radiation spectrum falls like 1/E (E=photon Energy) because particles loose many low-E photons and few high-E photons. I.e. It is rare to hit nuclei with small impact parameter because most of matter is empty
Photon energy limits:
low energy (large impact parameter) limited through shielding of nuclear charge by atomic electrons.
high energy limited by maximum incident particle energy.
28. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 28 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Bremsstrahlung ? EM-showers, Radiation length) dT/dx|Brem~T (see Williams p.247, similar to our deriv. of BBF and plot on slide 22) ? dominates over dT/dx|ionise ~ln(T) at high T.
Ecrit = Energy at which BR-losses exceed ionisation losses (see slide 22)
For electrons Bremsstrahlung dominates in nearly all materials above few 10 MeV. Ecrit(e-) 600 MeV/Z
If dT/dx|Brem~T ? T(x)=T0 exp(-x/X0)
Radiation Length X0 of a medium is defined as:
distance over which electron energy reduced to 1/e via many small BS-losses
X0 ~Z 2 approximately as it is the charge that particles interact with
Bremsstrahlung photon can produce e+e--pair (see later) and start an em-shower (also called cascade, next slide)
? The development of em-showers, whether started by primary e or ? is measured in X0.
29. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 29 12.2 Charged particles in matter(simple EM-shower model) Simple shower model assumes:
e2
E0 >> Ecrit
only single Brem-g or pair production per X0
The model predicts:
after 1 X0, ½ of E0 lost by primary via Bremsstrahlung
after next X0 both primary and photon loose ½ E again
until E of generation drops below Ecrit
At this stage remaining Energy lost via ionisation (for e+-) or compton scattering, photo-effect (for g) etc.
30. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 30 12.2 Charged particles in matter(Synchroton Radiation) Appears mainly in circular accelerators (mainly to electrons) and limits max. energy achievable.
Similar to Bremsstrahlung
Replace microscopic force from E-field in Bremsstrahlung with macroscopic force from vxB to keep electron on circular orbit
Electrons radiate only to the outside of circle because they are accelerated inward
Angle of maximum intensity of synchrotron radiation with tangent of ring ?=1/?
Synchrotron radiation = very bright source of broad range of photon energies up to few 10 keV used in many areas of science
Many astrophysical objects emit synchrotron radiation from relativistic electrons in strong magnetic fields
31. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 31 13.1 Photons in matter(Overview-I) Rayleigh scattering
Coherent, elastic scattering on the entire atom (the blue sky)
g + atom ? g + atom
dominant at lg>size of atoms
Compton scattering
Incoherent scattering on electron from atom
g + e-bound ? g + e-free
possible at all Eg > min(Ebind)
to properly call it Compton requires Eg>>Ebind(e-) to approximate free e-
Photoelectric effect
absorption of photon and ejection of single atomic electron
g + atom ? g + e-free + ion
possible for Eg < max(Ebind) + dE(Eatomic-recoil, line width) (just above k-edge)
32. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 32
33. 33 13.1 Photons in matter (Crossections) R ? Rayleigh PE ? Photoeffect C ? Compton PP ? Pair Production on nucleus
PPE ? Pair Production on atomic electrons PN ? Giant Photo-Nuclear dipole resonance
34. 24-25/11/05, Lect. 9-10 Nuclear Physics Lectures, Dr. Armin Reichold 34 13.1 Photons in matter(Comparison of Bremsstrahlung and Pair Production)