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Bremsstrahlung

In particle physics, bremsstrahlung /ˈbrɛmʃtrɑːləŋ/[1] (German pronunciation: [ˈbʁɛms.ʃtʁaːlʊŋ] ; from German bremsen 'to brake', and Strahlung 'radiation') is electromagnetic radiation produced by the deceleration of a charged particle when deflected by another charged particle, typically an electron by an atomic nucleus. The moving particle loses kinetic energy, which is converted into radiation (i.e., photons), thus satisfying the law of conservation of energy. The term is also used to refer to the process of producing the radiation. Bremsstrahlung has a continuous spectrum, which becomes more intense and whose peak intensity shifts toward higher frequencies as the change of the energy of the decelerated particles increases.

Bremsstrahlung produced by a high-energy electron deflected in the electric field of an atomic nucleus.

Broadly speaking, bremsstrahlung or braking radiation is any radiation produced due to the acceleration (positive or negative) of a charged particle, which includes synchrotron radiation (i.e., photon emission by a relativistic particle), cyclotron radiation (i.e. photon emission by a non-relativistic particle), and the emission of electrons and positrons during beta decay. However, the term is frequently used in the more narrow sense of radiation from electrons (from whatever source) slowing in matter.

Bremsstrahlung emitted from plasma is sometimes referred to as free–free radiation. This refers to the fact that the radiation in this case is created by electrons that are free (i.e., not in an atomic or molecular bound state) before, and remain free after, the emission of a photon. In the same parlance, bound–bound radiation refers to discrete spectral lines (an electron "jumps" between two bound states), while free–bound radiation refers to the radiative combination process, in which a free electron recombines with an ion.

Classical description edit

 
Field lines and modulus of the electric field generated by a (negative) charge first moving at a constant speed and then stopping quickly to show the generated Bremsstrahlung radiation.

If quantum effects are negligible, an accelerating charged particle radiates power as described by the Larmor formula and its relativistic generalization.

Total radiated power edit

The total radiated power is[2]

 
where   (the velocity of the particle divided by the speed of light),   is the Lorentz factor,   is the vacuum permittivity,   signifies a time derivative of  , and q is the charge of the particle. In the case where velocity is parallel to acceleration (i.e., linear motion), the expression reduces to[3]
 
where   is the acceleration. For the case of acceleration perpendicular to the velocity ( ), for example in synchrotrons, the total power is
 

Power radiated in the two limiting cases is proportional to     or    . Since  , we see that for particles with the same energy   the total radiated power goes as   or  , which accounts for why electrons lose energy to bremsstrahlung radiation much more rapidly than heavier charged particles (e.g., muons, protons, alpha particles). This is the reason a TeV energy electron-positron collider (such as the proposed International Linear Collider) cannot use a circular tunnel (requiring constant acceleration), while a proton-proton collider (such as the Large Hadron Collider) can utilize a circular tunnel. The electrons lose energy due to bremsstrahlung at a rate   times higher than protons do.

Angular distribution edit

The most general formula for radiated power as a function of angle is:[4]

 
where   is a unit vector pointing from the particle towards the observer, and   is an infinitesimal bit of solid angle.

In the case where velocity is parallel to acceleration (for example, linear motion), this simplifies to[4]

 
where   is the angle between   and the direction of observation  .

Simplified quantum-mechanical description edit

The full quantum-mechanical treatment of bremsstrahlung is very involved. The "vacuum case" of the interaction of one electron, one ion, and one photon, using the pure Coulomb potential, has an exact solution that was probably first published by A. Sommerfeld in 1931.[5] This analytical solution involves complicated mathematics, and several numerical calculations have been published, such as by Karzas and Latter.[6] Other approximate formulas have been presented, such as in recent work by Weinberg [7] and Pradler and Semmelrock.[8]

This section gives a quantum-mechanical analog of the prior section, but with some simplifications to illustrate the important physics. We give a non-relativistic treatment of the special case of an electron of mass  , charge  , and initial speed   decelerating in the Coulomb field of a gas of heavy ions of charge   and number density  . The emitted radiation is a photon of frequency   and energy  . We wish to find the emissivity   which is the power emitted per (solid angle in photon velocity space * photon frequency), summed over both transverse photon polarizations. We express it as an approximate classical result times the free−free emission Gaunt factor gff accounting for quantum and other corrections:

 
  if  , that is, the electron does not have enough kinetic energy to emit the photon. A general, quantum-mechanical formula for   exists but is very complicated, and usually is found by numerical calculations. We present some approximate results with the following additional assumptions:
  • Vacuum interaction: we neglect any effects of the background medium, such as plasma screening effects. This is reasonable for photon frequency much greater than the plasma frequency  with   the plasma electron density. Note that light waves are evanescent for   and a significantly different approach would be needed.
  • Soft photons:  , that is, the photon energy is much less than the initial electron kinetic energy.

With these assumptions, two unitless parameters characterize the process:  , which measures the strength of the electron-ion Coulomb interaction, and  , which measures the photon "softness" and we assume is always small (the choice of the factor 2 is for later convenience). In the limit  , the quantum-mechanical Born approximation gives:

 

In the opposite limit  , the full quantum-mechanical result reduces to the purely classical result

 
where   is the Euler–Mascheroni constant. Note that   which is a purely classical expression without Planck's constant  .

A semi-classical, heuristic way to understand the Gaunt factor is to write it as   where   and   are maximum and minimum "impact parameters" for the electron-ion collision, in the presence of the photon electric field. With our assumptions,  : for larger impact parameters, the sinusoidal oscillation of the photon field provides "phase mixing" that strongly reduces the interaction.   is the larger of the quantum-mechanical de Broglie wavelength   and the classical distance of closest approach   where the electron-ion Coulomb potential energy is comparable to the electron's initial kinetic energy.

The above approximations generally apply as long as the argument of the logarithm is large, and break down when it is less than unity. Namely, these forms for the Gaunt factor become negative, which is unphysical. A rough approximation to the full calculations, with the appropriate Born and classical limits, is

 

Thermal bremsstrahlung in a medium: emission and absorption edit

 
The bremsstrahlung power spectrum rapidly decreases for large  , and is also suppressed near  . This plot is for the quantum case  , and  .

This section discusses bremsstrahlung emission and the inverse absorption process (called inverse bremsstrahlung) in a macroscopic medium. We start with the equation of radiative transfer, which applies to general processes and not just bremsstrahlung:

 

  is the radiation spectral intensity, or power per (area × solid angle in photon velocity space × photon frequency) summed over both polarizations.   is the emissivity, analogous to  defined above, and   is the absorptivity.   and   are properties of the matter, not the radiation, and account for all the particles in the medium - not just a pair of one electron and one ion as in the prior section. If   is uniform in space and time, then the left-hand side of the transfer equation is zero, and we find

 

If the matter and radiation are also in thermal equilibrium at some temperature, then   must be the blackbody spectrum:

 

Since   and   are independent of  , this means that   must be the blackbody spectrum whenever the matter is in equilibrium at some temperature – regardless of the state of the radiation. This allows us to immediately know both   and   once one is known – for matter in equilibrium.

In plasma edit

NOTE: this section currently gives formulas that apply in the Rayleigh–Jeans limit  , and does not use a quantized (Planck) treatment of radiation. Thus a usual factor like   does not appear. The appearance of   in   below is due to the quantum-mechanical treatment of collisions.

In a plasma, the free electrons continually collide with the ions, producing bremsstrahlung. A complete analysis requires accounting for both binary Coulomb collisions as well as collective (dielectric) behavior. A detailed treatment is given by Bekefi,[9] while a simplified one is given by Ichimaru.[10] In this section we follow Bekefi's dielectric treatment, with collisions included approximately via the cutoff wavenumber,  .

Consider a uniform plasma, with thermal electrons distributed according to the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution with the temperature  . Following Bekefi, the power spectral density (power per angular frequency interval per volume, integrated over the whole   sr of solid angle, and in both polarizations) of the bremsstrahlung radiated, is calculated to be

 
where   is the electron plasma frequency,   is the photon frequency,   is the number density of electrons and ions, and other symbols are physical constants. The second bracketed factor is the index of refraction of a light wave in a plasma, and shows that emission is greatly suppressed for   (this is the cutoff condition for a light wave in a plasma; in this case the light wave is evanescent). This formula thus only applies for  . This formula should be summed over ion species in a multi-species plasma.

The special function   is defined in the exponential integral article, and the unitless quantity   is

 

  is a maximum or cutoff wavenumber, arising due to binary collisions, and can vary with ion species. Roughly,   when   (typical in plasmas that are not too cold), where   eV is the Hartree energy, and  [clarification needed] is the electron thermal de Broglie wavelength. Otherwise,   where   is the classical Coulomb distance of closest approach.

For the usual case  , we find

 

The formula for   is approximate, in that it neglects enhanced emission occurring for   slightly above  .

In the limit  , we can approximate   as   where   is the Euler–Mascheroni constant. The leading, logarithmic term is frequently used, and resembles the Coulomb logarithm that occurs in other collisional plasma calculations. For   the log term is negative, and the approximation is clearly inadequate. Bekefi gives corrected expressions for the logarithmic term that match detailed binary-collision calculations.

The total emission power density, integrated over all frequencies, is

 
  and decreases with  ; it is always positive. For  , we find
 

Note the appearance of   due to the quantum nature of  . In practical units, a commonly used version of this formula for   is [11]

 

This formula is 1.59 times the one given above, with the difference due to details of binary collisions. Such ambiguity is often expressed by introducing Gaunt factor  , e.g. in [12] one finds

 
where everything is expressed in the CGS units.

Relativistic corrections edit

 
Relativistic corrections to the emission of a 30-keV photon by an electron impacting on a proton.

For very high temperatures there are relativistic corrections to this formula, that is, additional terms of the order of  .[13]

Bremsstrahlung cooling edit

If the plasma is optically thin, the bremsstrahlung radiation leaves the plasma, carrying part of the internal plasma energy. This effect is known as the bremsstrahlung cooling. It is a type of radiative cooling. The energy carried away by bremsstrahlung is called bremsstrahlung losses and represents a type of radiative losses. One generally uses the term bremsstrahlung losses in the context when the plasma cooling is undesired, as e.g. in fusion plasmas.

Polarizational bremsstrahlung edit

Polarizational bremsstrahlung (sometimes referred to as "atomic bremsstrahlung") is the radiation emitted by the target's atomic electrons as the target atom is polarized by the Coulomb field of the incident charged particle.[14][15] Polarizational bremsstrahlung contributions to the total bremsstrahlung spectrum have been observed in experiments involving relatively massive incident particles,[16] resonance processes,[17] and free atoms.[18] However, there is still some debate as to whether or not there are significant polarizational bremsstrahlung contributions in experiments involving fast electrons incident on solid targets.[19][20]

It is worth noting that the term "polarizational" is not meant to imply that the emitted bremsstrahlung is polarized. Also, the angular distribution of polarizational bremsstrahlung is theoretically quite different than ordinary bremsstrahlung.[21]

Sources edit

X-ray tube edit

 
Spectrum of the X-rays emitted by an X-ray tube with a rhodium target, operated at 60 kV. The continuous curve is due to bremsstrahlung, and the spikes are characteristic K lines for rhodium. The curve goes to zero at 21 pm in agreement with the Duane–Hunt law, as described in the text.

In an X-ray tube, electrons are accelerated in a vacuum by an electric field towards a piece of metal called the "target". X-rays are emitted as the electrons slow down (decelerate) in the metal. The output spectrum consists of a continuous spectrum of X-rays, with additional sharp peaks at certain energies. The continuous spectrum is due to bremsstrahlung, while the sharp peaks are characteristic X-rays associated with the atoms in the target. For this reason, bremsstrahlung in this context is also called continuous X-rays.[22]

The shape of this continuum spectrum is approximately described by Kramers' law.

The formula for Kramers' law is usually given as the distribution of intensity (photon count)   against the wavelength   of the emitted radiation:[23]

 

The constant K is proportional to the atomic number of the target element, and   is the minimum wavelength given by the Duane–Hunt law.

The spectrum has a sharp cutoff at  , which is due to the limited energy of the incoming electrons. For example, if an electron in the tube is accelerated through 60 kV, then it will acquire a kinetic energy of 60 keV, and when it strikes the target it can create X-rays with energy of at most 60 keV, by conservation of energy. (This upper limit corresponds to the electron coming to a stop by emitting just one X-ray photon. Usually the electron emits many photons, and each has an energy less than 60 keV.) A photon with energy of at most 60 keV has wavelength of at least 21 pm, so the continuous X-ray spectrum has exactly that cutoff, as seen in the graph. More generally the formula for the low-wavelength cutoff, the Duane–Hunt law, is:[24]

 
where h is Planck's constant, c is the speed of light, V is the voltage that the electrons are accelerated through, e is the elementary charge, and pm is picometres.

Beta decay edit

Beta particle-emitting substances sometimes exhibit a weak radiation with continuous spectrum that is due to bremsstrahlung (see the "outer bremsstrahlung" below). In this context, bremsstrahlung is a type of "secondary radiation", in that it is produced as a result of stopping (or slowing) the primary radiation (beta particles). It is very similar to X-rays produced by bombarding metal targets with electrons in X-ray generators (as above) except that it is produced by high-speed electrons from beta radiation.

Inner and outer bremsstrahlung edit

The "inner" bremsstrahlung (also known as "internal bremsstrahlung") arises from the creation of the electron and its loss of energy (due to the strong electric field in the region of the nucleus undergoing decay) as it leaves the nucleus. Such radiation is a feature of beta decay in nuclei, but it is occasionally (less commonly) seen in the beta decay of free neutrons to protons, where it is created as the beta electron leaves the proton.

In electron and positron emission by beta decay the photon's energy comes from the electron-nucleon pair, with the spectrum of the bremsstrahlung decreasing continuously with increasing energy of the beta particle. In electron capture, the energy comes at the expense of the neutrino, and the spectrum is greatest at about one third of the normal neutrino energy, decreasing to zero electromagnetic energy at normal neutrino energy. Note that in the case of electron capture, bremsstrahlung is emitted even though no charged particle is emitted. Instead, the bremsstrahlung radiation may be thought of as being created as the captured electron is accelerated toward being absorbed. Such radiation may be at frequencies that are the same as soft gamma radiation, but it exhibits none of the sharp spectral lines of gamma decay, and thus is not technically gamma radiation.

The internal process is to be contrasted with the "outer" bremsstrahlung due to the impingement on the nucleus of electrons coming from the outside (i.e., emitted by another nucleus), as discussed above.[25]

Radiation safety edit

In some cases, such as the decay of 32
P
, the bremsstrahlung produced by shielding the beta radiation with the normally used dense materials (e.g. lead) is itself dangerous; in such cases, shielding must be accomplished with low density materials, such as Plexiglas (Lucite), plastic, wood, or water;[26] as the atomic number is lower for these materials, the intensity of bremsstrahlung is significantly reduced, but a larger thickness of shielding is required to stop the electrons (beta radiation).

In astrophysics edit

The dominant luminous component in a cluster of galaxies is the 107 to 108 kelvin intracluster medium. The emission from the intracluster medium is characterized by thermal bremsstrahlung. This radiation is in the energy range of X-rays and can be easily observed with space-based telescopes such as Chandra X-ray Observatory, XMM-Newton, ROSAT, ASCA, EXOSAT, Suzaku, RHESSI and future missions like IXO and Astro-H .

Bremsstrahlung is also the dominant emission mechanism for H II regions at radio wavelengths.

In electric discharges edit

In electric discharges, for example as laboratory discharges between two electrodes or as lightning discharges between cloud and ground or within clouds, electrons produce Bremsstrahlung photons while scattering off air molecules. These photons become manifest in terrestrial gamma-ray flashes and are the source for beams of electrons, positrons, neutrons and protons.[27] The appearance of Bremsstrahlung photons also influences the propagation and morphology of discharges in nitrogen-oxygen mixtures with low percentages of oxygen.[28]

Quantum mechanical description edit

The complete quantum mechanical description was first performed by Bethe and Heitler.[29] They assumed plane waves for electrons which scatter at the nucleus of an atom, and derived a cross section which relates the complete geometry of that process to the frequency of the emitted photon. The quadruply differential cross section, which shows a quantum mechanical symmetry to pair production, is

 

where   is the atomic number,   the fine-structure constant,   the reduced Planck's constant and   the speed of light. The kinetic energy   of the electron in the initial and final state is connected to its total energy   or its momenta   via

 
where   is the mass of an electron. Conservation of energy gives
 
where   is the photon energy. The directions of the emitted photon and the scattered electron are given by
 
where   is the momentum of the photon.

The differentials are given as

 

The absolute value of the virtual photon between the nucleus and electron is

 

The range of validity is given by the Born approximation

 
where this relation has to be fulfilled for the velocity   of the electron in the initial and final state.

For practical applications (e.g. in Monte Carlo codes) it can be interesting to focus on the relation between the frequency   of the emitted photon and the angle between this photon and the incident electron. Köhn and Ebert integrated the quadruply differential cross section by Bethe and Heitler over   and   and obtained:[30]

 

with

 

and

 

However, a much simpler expression for the same integral can be found in [31] (Eq. 2BN) and in [32] (Eq. 4.1).

An analysis of the doubly differential cross section above shows that electrons whose kinetic energy is larger than the rest energy (511 keV) emit photons in forward direction while electrons with a small energy emit photons isotropically.

Electron–electron bremsstrahlung edit

One mechanism, considered important for small atomic numbers  , is the scattering of a free electron at the shell electrons of an atom or molecule.[33] Since electron–electron bremsstrahlung is a function of   and the usual electron-nucleus bremsstrahlung is a function of  , electron–electron bremsstrahlung is negligible for metals. For air, however, it plays an important role in the production of terrestrial gamma-ray flashes.[34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Bremsstrahlung". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.
  2. ^ A Plasma Formulary for Physics, Technology, and Astrophysics, D. Diver, pp. 46–48.
  3. ^ Griffiths, D. J. Introduction to Electrodynamics. pp. 463–465.
  4. ^ a b Jackson. Classical Electrodynamics. §14.2–3.
  5. ^ Sommerfeld, A. (1931). "Über die Beugung und Bremsung der Elektronen". Annalen der Physik (in German). 403 (3): 257–330. Bibcode:1931AnP...403..257S. doi:10.1002/andp.19314030302.
  6. ^ Karzas, W. J.; Latter, R. (May 1961). "Electron Radiative Transitions in a Coulomb Field". The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 6: 167. Bibcode:1961ApJS....6..167K. doi:10.1086/190063. ISSN 0067-0049.
  7. ^ Weinberg, Steven (2019-04-30). "Soft bremsstrahlung". Physical Review D. 99 (7): 076018. arXiv:1903.11168. Bibcode:2019PhRvD..99g6018W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.99.076018. ISSN 2470-0010. S2CID 85529161.
  8. ^ Pradler, Josef; Semmelrock, Lukas (2021-11-01). "Nonrelativistic Electron–Ion Bremsstrahlung: An Approximate Formula for All Parameters". The Astrophysical Journal. 922 (1): 57. arXiv:2105.13362. Bibcode:2021ApJ...922...57P.
bremsstrahlung, particle, physics, bremsstrahlung, ɑː, german, pronunciation, ˈbʁɛms, ʃtʁaːlʊŋ, from, german, bremsen, brake, strahlung, radiation, electromagnetic, radiation, produced, deceleration, charged, particle, when, deflected, another, charged, partic. In particle physics bremsstrahlung ˈ b r ɛ m ʃ t r ɑː l e ŋ 1 German pronunciation ˈbʁɛms ʃtʁaːlʊŋ from German bremsen to brake and Strahlung radiation is electromagnetic radiation produced by the deceleration of a charged particle when deflected by another charged particle typically an electron by an atomic nucleus The moving particle loses kinetic energy which is converted into radiation i e photons thus satisfying the law of conservation of energy The term is also used to refer to the process of producing the radiation Bremsstrahlung has a continuous spectrum which becomes more intense and whose peak intensity shifts toward higher frequencies as the change of the energy of the decelerated particles increases Bremsstrahlung produced by a high energy electron deflected in the electric field of an atomic nucleus Broadly speaking bremsstrahlung or braking radiation is any radiation produced due to the acceleration positive or negative of a charged particle which includes synchrotron radiation i e photon emission by a relativistic particle cyclotron radiation i e photon emission by a non relativistic particle and the emission of electrons and positrons during beta decay However the term is frequently used in the more narrow sense of radiation from electrons from whatever source slowing in matter Bremsstrahlung emitted from plasma is sometimes referred to as free free radiation This refers to the fact that the radiation in this case is created by electrons that are free i e not in an atomic or molecular bound state before and remain free after the emission of a photon In the same parlance bound bound radiation refers to discrete spectral lines an electron jumps between two bound states while free bound radiation refers to the radiative combination process in which a free electron recombines with an ion Contents 1 Classical description 1 1 Total radiated power 1 2 Angular distribution 2 Simplified quantum mechanical description 3 Thermal bremsstrahlung in a medium emission and absorption 4 In plasma 4 1 Relativistic corrections 4 2 Bremsstrahlung cooling 5 Polarizational bremsstrahlung 6 Sources 6 1 X ray tube 6 2 Beta decay 6 2 1 Inner and outer bremsstrahlung 6 2 2 Radiation safety 6 3 In astrophysics 6 4 In electric discharges 7 Quantum mechanical description 8 Electron electron bremsstrahlung 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksClassical description editMain article Larmor formula nbsp Field lines and modulus of the electric field generated by a negative charge first moving at a constant speed and then stopping quickly to show the generated Bremsstrahlung radiation If quantum effects are negligible an accelerating charged particle radiates power as described by the Larmor formula and its relativistic generalization Total radiated power edit The total radiated power is 2 P q 2 g 4 6 p e 0 c b 2 b b 2 1 b 2 displaystyle P frac q 2 gamma 4 6 pi varepsilon 0 c left dot beta 2 frac left boldsymbol beta cdot dot boldsymbol beta right 2 1 beta 2 right nbsp where b v c textstyle boldsymbol beta frac mathbf v c nbsp the velocity of the particle divided by the speed of light g 1 1 b 2 textstyle gamma 1 sqrt 1 beta 2 nbsp is the Lorentz factor e 0 displaystyle varepsilon 0 nbsp is the vacuum permittivity b displaystyle dot boldsymbol beta nbsp signifies a time derivative of b displaystyle boldsymbol beta nbsp and q is the charge of the particle In the case where velocity is parallel to acceleration i e linear motion the expression reduces to 3 P a v q 2 a 2 g 6 6 p e 0 c 3 displaystyle P a parallel v frac q 2 a 2 gamma 6 6 pi varepsilon 0 c 3 nbsp where a v b c displaystyle a equiv dot v dot beta c nbsp is the acceleration For the case of acceleration perpendicular to the velocity b b 0 displaystyle boldsymbol beta cdot dot boldsymbol beta 0 nbsp for example in synchrotrons the total power is P a v q 2 a 2 g 4 6 p e 0 c 3 displaystyle P a perp v frac q 2 a 2 gamma 4 6 pi varepsilon 0 c 3 nbsp Power radiated in the two limiting cases is proportional to g 4 displaystyle gamma 4 nbsp a v displaystyle left a perp v right nbsp or g 6 displaystyle gamma 6 nbsp a v displaystyle left a parallel v right nbsp Since E g m c 2 displaystyle E gamma mc 2 nbsp we see that for particles with the same energy E displaystyle E nbsp the total radiated power goes as m 4 displaystyle m 4 nbsp or m 6 displaystyle m 6 nbsp which accounts for why electrons lose energy to bremsstrahlung radiation much more rapidly than heavier charged particles e g muons protons alpha particles This is the reason a TeV energy electron positron collider such as the proposed International Linear Collider cannot use a circular tunnel requiring constant acceleration while a proton proton collider such as the Large Hadron Collider can utilize a circular tunnel The electrons lose energy due to bremsstrahlung at a rate m p m e 4 10 13 displaystyle m p m e 4 approx 10 13 nbsp times higher than protons do Angular distribution edit The most general formula for radiated power as a function of angle is 4 d P d W q 2 16 p 2 e 0 c n n b b 2 1 n b 5 displaystyle frac dP d Omega frac q 2 16 pi 2 varepsilon 0 c frac left hat mathbf n times left left hat mathbf n boldsymbol beta right times dot boldsymbol beta right right 2 left 1 hat mathbf n cdot boldsymbol beta right 5 nbsp where n displaystyle hat mathbf n nbsp is a unit vector pointing from the particle towards the observer and d W displaystyle d Omega nbsp is an infinitesimal bit of solid angle In the case where velocity is parallel to acceleration for example linear motion this simplifies to 4 d P a v d W q 2 a 2 16 p 2 e 0 c 3 sin 2 8 1 b cos 8 5 displaystyle frac dP a parallel v d Omega frac q 2 a 2 16 pi 2 varepsilon 0 c 3 frac sin 2 theta 1 beta cos theta 5 nbsp where 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is the angle between b displaystyle boldsymbol beta nbsp and the direction of observation n displaystyle hat mathbf n nbsp Simplified quantum mechanical description editThe full quantum mechanical treatment of bremsstrahlung is very involved The vacuum case of the interaction of one electron one ion and one photon using the pure Coulomb potential has an exact solution that was probably first published by A Sommerfeld in 1931 5 This analytical solution involves complicated mathematics and several numerical calculations have been published such as by Karzas and Latter 6 Other approximate formulas have been presented such as in recent work by Weinberg 7 and Pradler and Semmelrock 8 This section gives a quantum mechanical analog of the prior section but with some simplifications to illustrate the important physics We give a non relativistic treatment of the special case of an electron of mass m e displaystyle m e nbsp charge e displaystyle e nbsp and initial speed v displaystyle v nbsp decelerating in the Coulomb field of a gas of heavy ions of charge Z e displaystyle Ze nbsp and number density n i displaystyle n i nbsp The emitted radiation is a photon of frequency n c l displaystyle nu c lambda nbsp and energy h n displaystyle h nu nbsp We wish to find the emissivity j v n displaystyle j v nu nbsp which is the power emitted per solid angle in photon velocity space photon frequency summed over both transverse photon polarizations We express it as an approximate classical result times the free free emission Gaunt factor gff accounting for quantum and other corrections j v n 8 p 3 3 e 2 4 p ϵ 0 3 Z 2 n i c 3 m e 2 v g f f v n displaystyle j v nu 8 pi over 3 sqrt 3 left e 2 over 4 pi epsilon 0 right 3 Z 2 n i over c 3 m e 2 v g rm ff v nu nbsp j n v 0 displaystyle j nu v 0 nbsp if h n gt m v 2 2 displaystyle h nu gt mv 2 2 nbsp that is the electron does not have enough kinetic energy to emit the photon A general quantum mechanical formula for g f f displaystyle g rm ff nbsp exists but is very complicated and usually is found by numerical calculations We present some approximate results with the following additional assumptions Vacuum interaction we neglect any effects of the background medium such as plasma screening effects This is reasonable for photon frequency much greater than the plasma frequency n p e n e 1 2 displaystyle nu rm pe propto n rm e 1 2 nbsp with n e displaystyle n e nbsp the plasma electron density Note that light waves are evanescent for n lt n p e displaystyle nu lt nu rm pe nbsp and a significantly different approach would be needed Soft photons h n m e v 2 2 displaystyle h nu ll m e v 2 2 nbsp that is the photon energy is much less than the initial electron kinetic energy With these assumptions two unitless parameters characterize the process h Z Z e 2 ℏ v displaystyle eta Z equiv Ze 2 hbar v nbsp which measures the strength of the electron ion Coulomb interaction and h n h n 2 m e v 2 displaystyle eta nu equiv h nu 2m e v 2 nbsp which measures the photon softness and we assume is always small the choice of the factor 2 is for later convenience In the limit h Z 1 displaystyle eta Z ll 1 nbsp the quantum mechanical Born approximation gives g ff Born 3 p ln 1 h n displaystyle g text ff Born sqrt 3 over pi ln 1 over eta nu nbsp In the opposite limit h Z 1 displaystyle eta Z gg 1 nbsp the full quantum mechanical result reduces to the purely classical resultg ff class 3 p ln 1 h Z h n g displaystyle g text ff class sqrt 3 over pi left ln left 1 over eta Z eta nu right gamma right nbsp where g 0 577 displaystyle gamma approx 0 577 nbsp is the Euler Mascheroni constant Note that 1 h Z h n m e v 3 p Z e 2 n displaystyle 1 eta Z eta nu m e v 3 pi Ze 2 nu nbsp which is a purely classical expression without Planck s constant h displaystyle h nbsp A semi classical heuristic way to understand the Gaunt factor is to write it as g ff ln b max b min displaystyle g text ff approx ln b text max b text min nbsp where b max displaystyle b max nbsp and b min displaystyle b min nbsp are maximum and minimum impact parameters for the electron ion collision in the presence of the photon electric field With our assumptions b m a x v n displaystyle b rm max v nu nbsp for larger impact parameters the sinusoidal oscillation of the photon field provides phase mixing that strongly reduces the interaction b m i n displaystyle b rm min nbsp is the larger of the quantum mechanical de Broglie wavelength h m e v displaystyle approx h m e v nbsp and the classical distance of closest approach e 2 4 p e 0 m e v 2 displaystyle approx e 2 4 pi varepsilon 0 m e v 2 nbsp where the electron ion Coulomb potential energy is comparable to the electron s initial kinetic energy The above approximations generally apply as long as the argument of the logarithm is large and break down when it is less than unity Namely these forms for the Gaunt factor become negative which is unphysical A rough approximation to the full calculations with the appropriate Born and classical limits isg ff max 1 3 p ln 1 h n max 1 e g h Z displaystyle g text ff approx max left 1 sqrt 3 over pi ln left 1 over eta nu max 1 e gamma eta Z right right nbsp Thermal bremsstrahlung in a medium emission and absorption edit nbsp The bremsstrahlung power spectrum rapidly decreases for large w displaystyle omega nbsp and is also suppressed near w w p displaystyle omega omega rm p nbsp This plot is for the quantum case T e gt Z 2 E h displaystyle T e gt Z 2 E text h nbsp and ℏ w p T e 0 1 displaystyle hbar omega text p T e 0 1 nbsp This section discusses bremsstrahlung emission and the inverse absorption process called inverse bremsstrahlung in a macroscopic medium We start with the equation of radiative transfer which applies to general processes and not just bremsstrahlung 1 c t I n n I n j n k n I n displaystyle frac 1 c partial t I nu hat mathbf n cdot nabla I nu j nu k nu I nu nbsp I n t x displaystyle I nu t mathbf x nbsp is the radiation spectral intensity or power per area solid angle in photon velocity space photon frequency summed over both polarizations j n displaystyle j nu nbsp is the emissivity analogous to j v n displaystyle j v nu nbsp defined above and k n displaystyle k nu nbsp is the absorptivity j n displaystyle j nu nbsp and k n displaystyle k nu nbsp are properties of the matter not the radiation and account for all the particles in the medium not just a pair of one electron and one ion as in the prior section If I n displaystyle I nu nbsp is uniform in space and time then the left hand side of the transfer equation is zero and we findI n j n k n displaystyle I nu j nu over k nu nbsp If the matter and radiation are also in thermal equilibrium at some temperature then I n displaystyle I nu nbsp must be the blackbody spectrum B n n T e 2 h n 3 c 2 1 e h n k B T e 1 displaystyle B nu nu T e frac 2h nu 3 c 2 frac 1 e h nu k text B T e 1 nbsp Since j n displaystyle j nu nbsp and k n displaystyle k nu nbsp are independent of I n displaystyle I nu nbsp this means that j n k n displaystyle j nu k nu nbsp must be the blackbody spectrum whenever the matter is in equilibrium at some temperature regardless of the state of the radiation This allows us to immediately know both j n displaystyle j nu nbsp and k n displaystyle k nu nbsp once one is known for matter in equilibrium In plasma editNOTE this section currently gives formulas that apply in the Rayleigh Jeans limit ℏ w k B T e displaystyle hbar omega ll k text B T e nbsp and does not use a quantized Planck treatment of radiation Thus a usual factor like exp ℏ w k B T e displaystyle exp hbar omega k rm B T e nbsp does not appear The appearance of ℏ w k B T e displaystyle hbar omega k text B T e nbsp in y displaystyle y nbsp below is due to the quantum mechanical treatment of collisions In a plasma the free electrons continually collide with the ions producing bremsstrahlung A complete analysis requires accounting for both binary Coulomb collisions as well as collective dielectric behavior A detailed treatment is given by Bekefi 9 while a simplified one is given by Ichimaru 10 In this section we follow Bekefi s dielectric treatment with collisions included approximately via the cutoff wavenumber k max displaystyle k text max nbsp Consider a uniform plasma with thermal electrons distributed according to the Maxwell Boltzmann distribution with the temperature T e displaystyle T e nbsp Following Bekefi the power spectral density power per angular frequency interval per volume integrated over the whole 4 p displaystyle 4 pi nbsp sr of solid angle and in both polarizations of the bremsstrahlung radiated is calculated to bed P B r d w 8 2 3 p e 2 4 p e 0 3 1 m e c 2 3 2 1 w p 2 w 2 1 2 Z i 2 n i n e k B T e 1 2 E 1 y displaystyle dP mathrm Br over d omega frac 8 sqrt 2 3 sqrt pi left frac e 2 4 pi varepsilon 0 right 3 1 over m e c 2 3 2 left 1 omega rm p 2 over omega 2 right 1 2 Z i 2 n i n e over k rm B T e 1 2 E 1 y nbsp where w p n e e 2 e 0 m e 1 2 displaystyle omega p equiv n e e 2 varepsilon 0 m e 1 2 nbsp is the electron plasma frequency w displaystyle omega nbsp is the photon frequency n e n i displaystyle n e n i nbsp is the number density of electrons and ions and other symbols are physical constants The second bracketed factor is the index of refraction of a light wave in a plasma and shows that emission is greatly suppressed for w lt w p displaystyle omega lt omega rm p nbsp this is the cutoff condition for a light wave in a plasma in this case the light wave is evanescent This formula thus only applies for w gt w p displaystyle omega gt omega rm p nbsp This formula should be summed over ion species in a multi species plasma The special function E 1 displaystyle E 1 nbsp is defined in the exponential integral article and the unitless quantity y displaystyle y nbsp isy 1 2 w 2 m e k max 2 k B T e displaystyle y frac 1 2 omega 2 m e over k text max 2 k text B T e nbsp k max displaystyle k text max nbsp is a maximum or cutoff wavenumber arising due to binary collisions and can vary with ion species Roughly k max 1 l B displaystyle k text max 1 lambda text B nbsp when k B T e gt Z i 2 E h displaystyle k text B T text e gt Z i 2 E text h nbsp typical in plasmas that are not too cold where E h 27 2 displaystyle E text h approx 27 2 nbsp eV is the Hartree energy and l B ℏ m e k B T e 1 2 displaystyle lambda text B hbar m text e k text B T text e 1 2 nbsp clarification needed is the electron thermal de Broglie wavelength Otherwise k max 1 l C displaystyle k text max propto 1 l text C nbsp where l C displaystyle l text C nbsp is the classical Coulomb distance of closest approach For the usual case k m 1 l B displaystyle k m 1 lambda B nbsp we findy 1 2 ℏ w k B T e 2 displaystyle y frac 1 2 left frac hbar omega k text B T e right 2 nbsp The formula for d P B r d w displaystyle dP mathrm Br d omega nbsp is approximate in that it neglects enhanced emission occurring for w displaystyle omega nbsp slightly above w p displaystyle omega text p nbsp In the limit y 1 displaystyle y ll 1 nbsp we can approximate E 1 displaystyle E 1 nbsp as E 1 y ln y e g O y displaystyle E 1 y approx ln ye gamma O y nbsp where g 0 577 displaystyle gamma approx 0 577 nbsp is the Euler Mascheroni constant The leading logarithmic term is frequently used and resembles the Coulomb logarithm that occurs in other collisional plasma calculations For y gt e g displaystyle y gt e gamma nbsp the log term is negative and the approximation is clearly inadequate Bekefi gives corrected expressions for the logarithmic term that match detailed binary collision calculations The total emission power density integrated over all frequencies isP B r w p d w d P B r d w 16 3 e 2 4 p e 0 3 1 m e 2 c 3 Z i 2 n i n e k max G y p G y p 1 2 p y p d y y 1 2 1 y p y 1 2 E 1 y y p y w w p displaystyle begin aligned P mathrm Br amp int omega text p infty d omega frac dP mathrm Br d omega frac 16 3 left frac e 2 4 pi varepsilon 0 right 3 frac 1 m e 2 c 3 Z i 2 n i n e k text max G y text p 1ex G y p amp frac 1 2 sqrt pi int y text p infty dy y 1 2 left 1 y text p over y right 1 2 E 1 y 1ex y text p amp y omega omega text p end aligned nbsp G y p 0 1 displaystyle G y text p 0 1 nbsp and decreases with y p displaystyle y text p nbsp it is always positive For k max 1 l B displaystyle k text max 1 lambda text B nbsp we findP B r 16 3 e 2 4 p e 0 3 m e c 2 3 2 ℏ Z i 2 n i n e k B T e 1 2 G y p displaystyle P mathrm Br 16 over 3 left frac e 2 4 pi varepsilon 0 right 3 over m e c 2 frac 3 2 hbar Z i 2 n i n e k rm B T e frac 1 2 G y rm p nbsp Note the appearance of ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp due to the quantum nature of l B displaystyle lambda rm B nbsp In practical units a commonly used version of this formula for G 1 displaystyle G 1 nbsp is 11 P B r W m 3 Z i 2 n i n e 7 69 10 18 m 3 2 T e e V 1 2 displaystyle P mathrm Br mathrm W m 3 Z i 2 n i n e over left 7 69 times 10 18 mathrm m 3 right 2 T e mathrm eV frac 1 2 nbsp This formula is 1 59 times the one given above with the difference due to details of binary collisions Such ambiguity is often expressed by introducing Gaunt factor g B displaystyle g rm B nbsp e g in 12 one findse ff 1 4 10 27 T 1 2 n e n i Z 2 g B displaystyle varepsilon text ff 1 4 times 10 27 T frac 1 2 n e n i Z 2 g text B nbsp where everything is expressed in the CGS units Relativistic corrections edit nbsp Relativistic corrections to the emission of a 30 keV photon by an electron impacting on a proton For very high temperatures there are relativistic corrections to this formula that is additional terms of the order of k B T e m e c 2 displaystyle k text B T e m e c 2 nbsp 13 Bremsstrahlung cooling edit If the plasma is optically thin the bremsstrahlung radiation leaves the plasma carrying part of the internal plasma energy This effect is known as the bremsstrahlung cooling It is a type of radiative cooling The energy carried away by bremsstrahlung is called bremsstrahlung losses and represents a type of radiative losses One generally uses the term bremsstrahlung losses in the context when the plasma cooling is undesired as e g in fusion plasmas Polarizational bremsstrahlung editPolarizational bremsstrahlung sometimes referred to as atomic bremsstrahlung is the radiation emitted by the target s atomic electrons as the target atom is polarized by the Coulomb field of the incident charged particle 14 15 Polarizational bremsstrahlung contributions to the total bremsstrahlung spectrum have been observed in experiments involving relatively massive incident particles 16 resonance processes 17 and free atoms 18 However there is still some debate as to whether or not there are significant polarizational bremsstrahlung contributions in experiments involving fast electrons incident on solid targets 19 20 It is worth noting that the term polarizational is not meant to imply that the emitted bremsstrahlung is polarized Also the angular distribution of polarizational bremsstrahlung is theoretically quite different than ordinary bremsstrahlung 21 Sources editX ray tube edit nbsp Spectrum of the X rays emitted by an X ray tube with a rhodium target operated at 60 kV The continuous curve is due to bremsstrahlung and the spikes are characteristic K lines for rhodium The curve goes to zero at 21 pm in agreement with the Duane Hunt law as described in the text Main article X ray tube In an X ray tube electrons are accelerated in a vacuum by an electric field towards a piece of metal called the target X rays are emitted as the electrons slow down decelerate in the metal The output spectrum consists of a continuous spectrum of X rays with additional sharp peaks at certain energies The continuous spectrum is due to bremsstrahlung while the sharp peaks are characteristic X rays associated with the atoms in the target For this reason bremsstrahlung in this context is also called continuous X rays 22 The shape of this continuum spectrum is approximately described by Kramers law The formula for Kramers law is usually given as the distribution of intensity photon count I displaystyle I nbsp against the wavelength l displaystyle lambda nbsp of the emitted radiation 23 I l d l K l l min 1 d l l 2 displaystyle I lambda d lambda K left frac lambda lambda min 1 right frac d lambda lambda 2 nbsp The constant K is proportional to the atomic number of the target element and l min displaystyle lambda min nbsp is the minimum wavelength given by the Duane Hunt law The spectrum has a sharp cutoff at l min displaystyle lambda min nbsp which is due to the limited energy of the incoming electrons For example if an electron in the tube is accelerated through 60 kV then it will acquire a kinetic energy of 60 keV and when it strikes the target it can create X rays with energy of at most 60 keV by conservation of energy This upper limit corresponds to the electron coming to a stop by emitting just one X ray photon Usually the electron emits many photons and each has an energy less than 60 keV A photon with energy of at most 60 keV has wavelength of at least 21 pm so the continuous X ray spectrum has exactly that cutoff as seen in the graph More generally the formula for the low wavelength cutoff the Duane Hunt law is 24 l min h c e V 1239 8 V p m k V displaystyle lambda min frac hc eV approx frac 1239 8 V mathrm pm kV nbsp where h is Planck s constant c is the speed of light V is the voltage that the electrons are accelerated through e is the elementary charge and pm is picometres Beta decay edit Main article Beta decay Beta particle emitting substances sometimes exhibit a weak radiation with continuous spectrum that is due to bremsstrahlung see the outer bremsstrahlung below In this context bremsstrahlung is a type of secondary radiation in that it is produced as a result of stopping or slowing the primary radiation beta particles It is very similar to X rays produced by bombarding metal targets with electrons in X ray generators as above except that it is produced by high speed electrons from beta radiation Inner and outer bremsstrahlung edit The inner bremsstrahlung also known as internal bremsstrahlung arises from the creation of the electron and its loss of energy due to the strong electric field in the region of the nucleus undergoing decay as it leaves the nucleus Such radiation is a feature of beta decay in nuclei but it is occasionally less commonly seen in the beta decay of free neutrons to protons where it is created as the beta electron leaves the proton In electron and positron emission by beta decay the photon s energy comes from the electron nucleon pair with the spectrum of the bremsstrahlung decreasing continuously with increasing energy of the beta particle In electron capture the energy comes at the expense of the neutrino and the spectrum is greatest at about one third of the normal neutrino energy decreasing to zero electromagnetic energy at normal neutrino energy Note that in the case of electron capture bremsstrahlung is emitted even though no charged particle is emitted Instead the bremsstrahlung radiation may be thought of as being created as the captured electron is accelerated toward being absorbed Such radiation may be at frequencies that are the same as soft gamma radiation but it exhibits none of the sharp spectral lines of gamma decay and thus is not technically gamma radiation The internal process is to be contrasted with the outer bremsstrahlung due to the impingement on the nucleus of electrons coming from the outside i e emitted by another nucleus as discussed above 25 Radiation safety edit In some cases such as the decay of 32 P the bremsstrahlung produced by shielding the beta radiation with the normally used dense materials e g lead is itself dangerous in such cases shielding must be accomplished with low density materials such as Plexiglas Lucite plastic wood or water 26 as the atomic number is lower for these materials the intensity of bremsstrahlung is significantly reduced but a larger thickness of shielding is required to stop the electrons beta radiation In astrophysics edit The dominant luminous component in a cluster of galaxies is the 107 to 108 kelvin intracluster medium The emission from the intracluster medium is characterized by thermal bremsstrahlung This radiation is in the energy range of X rays and can be easily observed with space based telescopes such as Chandra X ray Observatory XMM Newton ROSAT ASCA EXOSAT Suzaku RHESSI and future missions like IXO 1 and Astro H 2 Bremsstrahlung is also the dominant emission mechanism for H II regions at radio wavelengths In electric discharges edit In electric discharges for example as laboratory discharges between two electrodes or as lightning discharges between cloud and ground or within clouds electrons produce Bremsstrahlung photons while scattering off air molecules These photons become manifest in terrestrial gamma ray flashes and are the source for beams of electrons positrons neutrons and protons 27 The appearance of Bremsstrahlung photons also influences the propagation and morphology of discharges in nitrogen oxygen mixtures with low percentages of oxygen 28 Quantum mechanical description editThe complete quantum mechanical description was first performed by Bethe and Heitler 29 They assumed plane waves for electrons which scatter at the nucleus of an atom and derived a cross section which relates the complete geometry of that process to the frequency of the emitted photon The quadruply differential cross section which shows a quantum mechanical symmetry to pair production is d 4 s Z 2 a fine 3 ℏ 2 2 p 2 p f p i d w w d W i d W f d F q 4 p f 2 sin 2 8 f E f c p f cos 8 f 2 4 E i 2 c 2 q 2 p i 2 sin 2 8 i E i c p i cos 8 i 2 4 E f 2 c 2 q 2 2 ℏ 2 w 2 p i 2 sin 2 8 i p f 2 sin 2 8 f E f c p f cos 8 f E i c p i cos 8 i 2 p i p f sin 8 i sin 8 f cos F E f c p f cos 8 f E i c p i c 1 cos 8 i 2 E i 2 2 E f 2 c 2 q 2 displaystyle begin aligned d 4 sigma amp frac Z 2 alpha text fine 3 hbar 2 2 pi 2 frac left mathbf p f right left mathbf p i right frac d omega omega frac d Omega i d Omega f d Phi left mathbf q right 4 amp times left frac mathbf p f 2 sin 2 Theta f left E f c left mathbf p f right cos Theta f right 2 left 4E i 2 c 2 mathbf q 2 right frac mathbf p i 2 sin 2 Theta i left E i c left mathbf p i right cos Theta i right 2 left 4E f 2 c 2 mathbf q 2 right right amp qquad 2 hbar 2 omega 2 frac mathbf p i 2 sin 2 Theta i mathbf p f 2 sin 2 Theta f E f c left mathbf p f right cos Theta f left E i c left mathbf p i right cos Theta i right amp qquad 2 left frac left mathbf p i right left mathbf p f right sin Theta i sin Theta f cos Phi left E f c left mathbf p f right cos Theta f right left E i c left mathbf p i right c1 cos Theta i right left 2E i 2 2E f 2 c 2 mathbf q 2 right right end aligned nbsp where Z displaystyle Z nbsp is the atomic number a fine 1 137 displaystyle alpha text fine approx 1 137 nbsp the fine structure constant ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp the reduced Planck s constant and c displaystyle c nbsp the speed of light The kinetic energy E kin i f displaystyle E text kin i f nbsp of the electron in the initial and final state is connected to its total energy E i f displaystyle E i f nbsp or its momenta p i f displaystyle mathbf p i f nbsp viaE i f E kin i f m e c 2 m e 2 c 4 p i f 2 c 2 displaystyle E i f E text kin i f m e c 2 sqrt m e 2 c 4 mathbf p i f 2 c 2 nbsp where m e displaystyle m e nbsp is the mass of an electron Conservation of energy gives E f E i ℏ w displaystyle E f E i hbar omega nbsp where ℏ w displaystyle hbar omega nbsp is the photon energy The directions of the emitted photon and the scattered electron are given by 8 i p i k 8 f p f k F Angle between the planes p i k and p f k displaystyle begin aligned Theta i amp sphericalangle mathbf p i mathbf k Theta f amp sphericalangle mathbf p f mathbf k Phi amp text Angle between the planes mathbf p i mathbf k text and mathbf p f mathbf k end aligned nbsp where k displaystyle mathbf k nbsp is the momentum of the photon The differentials are given asd W i sin 8 i d 8 i d W f sin 8 f d 8 f displaystyle begin aligned d Omega i amp sin Theta i d Theta i d Omega f amp sin Theta f d Theta f end aligned nbsp The absolute value of the virtual photon between the nucleus and electron is q 2 p i 2 p f 2 ℏ c w 2 2 p i ℏ c w cos 8 i 2 p f ℏ c w cos 8 f 2 p i p f cos 8 f cos 8 i sin 8 f sin 8 i cos F displaystyle begin aligned mathbf q 2 amp left mathbf p i right 2 left mathbf p f right 2 left frac hbar c omega right 2 2 left mathbf p i right frac hbar c omega cos Theta i 2 left mathbf p f right frac hbar c omega cos Theta f amp 2 left mathbf p i right left mathbf p f right left cos Theta f cos Theta i sin Theta f sin Theta i cos Phi right end aligned nbsp The range of validity is given by the Born approximationv Z c 137 displaystyle v gg frac Zc 137 nbsp where this relation has to be fulfilled for the velocity v displaystyle v nbsp of the electron in the initial and final state For practical applications e g in Monte Carlo codes it can be interesting to focus on the relation between the frequency w displaystyle omega nbsp of the emitted photon and the angle between this photon and the incident electron Kohn and Ebert integrated the quadruply differential cross section by Bethe and Heitler over F displaystyle Phi nbsp and 8 f displaystyle Theta f nbsp and obtained 30 d 2 s E i w 8 i d w d W i j 1 6 I j displaystyle frac d 2 sigma E i omega Theta i d omega d Omega i sum limits j 1 6 I j nbsp with I 1 2 p A D 2 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i ln D 2 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 2 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 1 D 2 D 1 D 2 D 2 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 2 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 1 D 2 D 1 D 2 1 c D 2 p f E i c p i cos 8 i p i 2 c 2 sin 2 8 i E i c p i cos 8 i 2 2 ℏ 2 w 2 p f D 2 c E i c p i cos 8 i D 2 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i I 2 2 p A c p f E i c p i cos 8 i ln E f p f c E f p f c I 3 2 p A D 2 E f D 1 p f c 4 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i ln E f p f c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i E f p f c D 1 D 2 D 2 E f D 1 p f c D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i E f p f c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i E f p f c D 1 D 2 D 2 E f D 1 p f c D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i 1 D 2 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i E f 3 E f p f 2 c 2 p f c 2 D 1 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i E f p f c D 1 D 2 3 E f 2 p f 2 c 2 D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i c D 2 E f D 1 p f c p f E i c p i cos 8 i 4 E i 2 p f 2 2 D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 1 E f D 2 p f c D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i 2 8 p i 2 p f 2 m 2 c 4 sin 2 8 i E i 2 E f 2 2 ℏ 2 w 2 p i 2 sin 2 8 i p f c D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 ℏ 2 w 2 p f m 2 c 3 D 2 E f D 1 p f c E i c p i cos 8 i D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i I 4 4 p A p f c D 2 E f D 1 p f c D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i 16 p E i 2 p f 2 A D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i 2 I 5 4 p A D 2 2 D 1 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i ℏ 2 w 2 p f 2 E i c p i cos 8 i E f 2 D 2 2 D 2 2 D 1 2 8 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 2 2 D 1 2 p f c 2 D 1 D 2 D 2 2 D 1 2 16 D 1 D 2 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 2 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i 2 ℏ 2 w 2 p i 2 sin 2 8 i 2 D 1 D 2 p f c 2 D 2 2 E f 8 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i E f E i c p i cos 8 i 2 E i 2 p f 2 2 D 2 2 D 1 2 D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 8 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i D 1 2 D 2 2 E f 2 p f 2 c 2 4 D 1 D 2 E f p f c D 2 E f D 1 p f c 2 4 m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i 8 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i E i 2 E f 2 D 2 p f c D 1 E f E i c p i cos 8 i I 6 16 p E f 2 p i 2 sin 2 8 i A E i c p i cos 8 i 2 D 2 2 D 1 2 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 8 i displaystyle begin aligned I 1 amp frac 2 pi A sqrt Delta 2 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i ln left frac Delta 2 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i sqrt Delta 2 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i left Delta 1 Delta 2 right Delta 1 Delta 2 Delta 2 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i sqrt Delta 2 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i left Delta 1 Delta 2 right Delta 1 Delta 2 right amp times left 1 frac c Delta 2 p f left E i cp i cos Theta i right frac p i 2 c 2 sin 2 Theta i left E i cp i cos Theta i right 2 frac 2 hbar 2 omega 2 p f Delta 2 c left E i cp i cos Theta i right left Delta 2 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right right I 2 amp frac 2 pi Ac p f left E i cp i cos Theta i right ln left frac E f p f c E f p f c right I 3 amp frac 2 pi A sqrt left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 4 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i times ln left left left E f p f c right right right amp left left 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i left E f p f c right left Delta 1 Delta 2 right left left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right sqrt left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right right right amp left left E f p f c right left 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i left E f p f c right right right amp left left left Delta 1 Delta 2 right left left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right sqrt left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right right right 1 amp times left frac left Delta 2 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right left E f 3 E f p f 2 c 2 right p f c left 2 left Delta 1 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right E f p f c Delta 1 Delta 2 left 3E f 2 p f 2 c 2 right right left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right amp frac c left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right p f left E i cp i cos Theta i right frac 4E i 2 p f 2 left 2 left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right left Delta 1 E f Delta 2 p f c right left left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right 2 amp left frac 8p i 2 p f 2 m 2 c 4 sin 2 Theta i left E i 2 E f 2 right 2 hbar 2 omega 2 p i 2 sin 2 Theta i p f c left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 hbar 2 omega 2 p f m 2 c 3 left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right left E i cp i cos Theta i right left left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right right I 4 amp frac 4 pi Ap f c left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i frac 16 pi E i 2 p f 2 A left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 left left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right 2 I 5 amp frac 4 pi A left Delta 2 2 Delta 1 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right left left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right amp times left frac hbar 2 omega 2 p f 2 E i cp i cos Theta i right amp times frac E f left 2 Delta 2 2 left Delta 2 2 Delta 1 2 right 8p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i left Delta 2 2 Delta 1 2 right right p f c left 2 Delta 1 Delta 2 left Delta 2 2 Delta 1 2 right 16 Delta 1 Delta 2 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right Delta 2 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i amp frac 2 hbar 2 omega 2 p i 2 sin 2 Theta i left 2 Delta 1 Delta 2 p f c 2 Delta 2 2 E f 8p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i E f right E i cp i cos Theta i amp frac 2E i 2 p f 2 left 2 left Delta 2 2 Delta 1 2 right left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 8p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i left left Delta 1 2 Delta 2 2 right left E f 2 p f 2 c 2 right 4 Delta 1 Delta 2 E f p f c right right left Delta 2 E f Delta 1 p f c right 2 4m 2 c 4 p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i amp left frac 8p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i left E i 2 E f 2 right left Delta 2 p f c Delta 1 E f right E i cp i cos Theta i right I 6 amp frac 16 pi E f 2 p i 2 sin 2 Theta i A left E i cp i cos Theta i right 2 left Delta 2 2 Delta 1 2 4p i 2 p f 2 sin 2 Theta i right end aligned nbsp and A Z 2 a fine 3 2 p 2 p f p i ℏ 2 w D 1 p i 2 p f 2 ℏ c w 2 2 ℏ c w p i cos 8 i D 2 2 ℏ c w p f 2 p i p f cos 8 i displaystyle begin aligned A amp frac Z 2 alpha text fine 3 2 pi 2 frac left mathbf p f right left mathbf p i right frac hbar 2 omega Delta 1 amp mathbf p i 2 mathbf p f 2 left frac hbar c omega right 2 2 frac hbar c omega left mathbf p i right cos Theta i Delta 2 amp 2 frac hbar c omega left mathbf p f right 2 left mathbf p i right left mathbf p f right cos Theta i end aligned nbsp However a much simpler expression for the same integral can be found in 31 Eq 2BN and in 32 Eq 4 1 An analysis of the doubly differential cross section above shows that electrons whose kinetic energy is larger than the rest energy 511 keV emit photons in forward direction while electrons with a small energy emit photons isotropically Electron electron bremsstrahlung editOne mechanism considered important for small atomic numbers Z displaystyle Z nbsp is the scattering of a free electron at the shell electrons of an atom or molecule 33 Since electron electron bremsstrahlung is a function of Z displaystyle Z nbsp and the usual electron nucleus bremsstrahlung is a function of Z 2 displaystyle Z 2 nbsp electron electron bremsstrahlung is negligible for metals For air however it plays an important role in the production of terrestrial gamma ray flashes 34 See also editBeamstrahlung Cyclotron radiation Wiggler synchrotron Free electron laser History of X rays Landau Pomeranchuk Migdal effect Nuclear fusion bremsstrahlung losses Radiation length characterising energy loss by bremsstrahlung by high energy electrons in matter Synchrotron light sourceReferences edit Bremsstrahlung Merriam Webster com Dictionary A Plasma Formulary for Physics Technology and Astrophysics D Diver pp 46 48 Griffiths D J Introduction to Electrodynamics pp 463 465 a b Jackson Classical Electrodynamics 14 2 3 Sommerfeld A 1931 Uber die Beugung und Bremsung der Elektronen Annalen der Physik in German 403 3 257 330 Bibcode 1931AnP 403 257S doi 10 1002 andp 19314030302 Karzas W J Latter R May 1961 Electron Radiative Transitions in a Coulomb Field The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 6 167 Bibcode 1961ApJS 6 167K doi 10 1086 190063 ISSN 0067 0049 Weinberg Steven 2019 04 30 Soft bremsstrahlung Physical Review D 99 7 076018 arXiv 1903 11168 Bibcode 2019PhRvD 99g6018W doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 99 076018 ISSN 2470 0010 S2CID 85529161 Pradler Josef Semmelrock Lukas 2021 11 01 Nonrelativistic Electron Ion Bremsstrahlung An Approximate Formula for All Parameters The Astrophysical Journal 922 1 57 arXiv 2105 13362 Bibcode 2021ApJ 922 57P a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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