Lecture 23
Lecture 23
L23.P1
traveling in Z direction encounters a scattering potential that produces outgoing spherical wave:
Therefore, the solutions of the Schrdinger equation have the general form:
energy of the incident particle The quantity given direction. called scattering amplitude is the probability of scattering in a
Therefore, to solve the scattering problem, we need to calculate the scattering amplitude
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L23.P2 Partial wave analysis Our potential is spherically symmetric The solutions of the Schrdinger equation are
Our goal is to develop method that would allow us to find the scattering amplitude. We separate our space into three zones: Scattering zone In Zone III the radial Schrdinger equation is
Intermediate region
Radiation Zone (outgoing spherical wave as we assumed earlier) Both V=0 and centrifugal term may be taken to be zero. In Zone II we can neglect the potential term, but not the centrifugal term:
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nor
represents an outgoing or
Since the potential is spherically symmetric, the wave function can not depend on since and only terms
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and
we get
for large r, the Hankel function behaves as and the wave function becomes
is called partial wave amplitude (since waves with different values of orbital angular momentum are referred to as partial waves). This is why this method is called partial wave analysis. The differential cross-section is the given by
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L23.P5
Strategy how to solve scattering problems using the partial wave analysis: Solve Schrdinger equation in the interior region (where V0) and match this solution to the exterior solution that we have derived using the boundary conditions. This procedure will give the partial wave amplitude . Then, plug in the partial wave amplitude into the formulas for the differential and/or total scattering cross-sections. However, before considering an example we note that our expression for the exterior wave function is in mixed coordinates: the incoming wave is in cartesian coordinates while the outgoing wave is in spherical coordinates. We can re-write the expression for the incoming wave in spherical coordinates by using the expansion for the exponential
We note that amplitude of the incoming wave has to be equal to the amplitude of the outgoing wave (by conservation of probability), so we can reformulate our scattering problem in terms of calculating the phase shifts rather than partial wave amplitudes defined as:
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The potential is
This is 4 times larger than the classical result for hard-sphere scattering ! In the classical case, the result that we got was the geometrical cross-section of the sphere. In the quantum case, the scattering cross-section is the total surface area of the sphere. This is characteristic of the long-wavelength scattering.
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