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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

2010

Electron impact

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Reaction Dynamics In Double Ionization Of Helium By Electron Impact, Marcelo F. Ciappina, Michael Schulz, Tom Kirchner Dec 2010

Reaction Dynamics In Double Ionization Of Helium By Electron Impact, Marcelo F. Ciappina, Michael Schulz, Tom Kirchner

Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

We present theoretical fully differential cross sections (FDCS) for double ionization of helium by 500 eV and 2 keV electron impact. Contributions from various reaction mechanisms to the FDCS were calculated separately and compared to experimental data. Our theoretical methods are based on the first Born approximation. Higher-order effects are incorporated using the Monte Carlo event generator technique. Earlier, we successfully applied this approach to double ionization by ion impact, and in the work reported here it is extended to electron impact. We demonstrate that at 500 eV impact energy, double ionization is dominated by higher-order mechanisms. Even at 2 …


Fivefold Differential Cross Sections For Ground-State Ionization Of Aligned H₂ By Electron Impact, Arne Senftleben, Ola A. Al-Hagan, Thomas Pfluger, Xueguang Ren, Don H. Madison, Alexander Dorn, Joachim Hermann Ullrich Jul 2010

Fivefold Differential Cross Sections For Ground-State Ionization Of Aligned H₂ By Electron Impact, Arne Senftleben, Ola A. Al-Hagan, Thomas Pfluger, Xueguang Ren, Don H. Madison, Alexander Dorn, Joachim Hermann Ullrich

Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

We discuss the ionization of aligned hydrogen molecules into their ionic ground state by 200 eV electrons. Using a reaction microscope, the complete electron scattering kinematics is imaged over a large solid angle. Simultaneously, the molecular alignment is derived from postcollision dissociation of the residual ion. It is found that the ionization cross section is maximized for small angles between the internuclear axis and the momentum transfer. Fivefold differential cross sections (5DCSs) reveal subtle differences in the scattering process for the distinct alignments. We compare our observations with theoretical 5DCSs obtained with an adapted molecular three-body distorted wave model that …