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Scattering theory From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Generally in scattering theory and in particular in quantum mechanics, the Born approximation consists of taking the incident field in place of the total field as the driving field at each point in the scatterer. The Born approximation is named after Max Born who proposed this approximation in early days of quantum theory development.[1]
It is the perturbation method applied to scattering by an extended body. It is accurate if the scattered field is small compared to the incident field on the scatterer.
For example, the scattering of radio waves by a light styrofoam column can be approximated by assuming that each part of the plastic is polarized by the same electric field that would be present at that point without the column, and then calculating the scattering as a radiation integral over that polarization distribution.
The Lippmann–Schwinger equation for the scattering state with a momentum p and out-going (+) or in-going (−) boundary conditions is
where is the free particle Green's function, is a positive infinitesimal quantity, and the interaction potential. is the corresponding free scattering solution sometimes called the incident field. The factor on the right hand side is sometimes called the driving field.
Within the Born approximation, the above equation is expressed as
which is much easier to solve since the right hand side no longer depends on the unknown state .
The obtained solution is the starting point of the Born series.
Using the outgoing free Green's function for a particle with mass in coordinate space,
one can extract the Born approximation to the scattering amplitude from the Born approximation to the Lippmann–Schwinger equation above,
where is the angle between the incident wavevector and the scattered wavevector , is the transferred momentum. In the centrally symmetric potential , the scattering amplitude becomes[2]
where In the Born approximation for centrally symmetric field, the scattering amplitude and thus the cross section depends on the momentum and the scattering amplitude only through the combination .
The Born approximation is used in several different physical contexts.
In neutron scattering, the first-order Born approximation is almost always adequate, except for neutron optical phenomena like internal total reflection in a neutron guide, or grazing-incidence small-angle scattering. Using the first Born approximation, it has been shown that the scattering amplitude for a scattering potential is the same as the Fourier transform of the scattering potential [3] . Using this concept, the electronic analogue of Fourier optics has been theoretically studied in monolayer graphene.[4] The Born approximation has also been used to calculate conductivity in bilayer graphene[5] and to approximate the propagation of long-wavelength waves in elastic media.[6]
The same ideas have also been applied to studying the movements of seismic waves through the Earth.[7]
The Born approximation is simplest when the incident waves are plane waves. That is, the scatterer is treated as a perturbation to free space or to a homogeneous medium.
In the distorted-wave Born approximation (DWBA), the incident waves are solutions to a part of the problem that is treated by some other method, either analytical or numerical. The interaction of interest is treated as a perturbation to some system that can be solved by some other method. For nuclear reactions, numerical optical model waves are used. For scattering of charged particles by charged particles, analytic solutions for coulomb scattering are used. This gives the non-Born preliminary equation
and the Born approximation
Other applications include bremsstrahlung and the photoelectric effect. For a charged-particle-induced direct nuclear reaction, the procedure is used twice. There are similar methods that do not use the Born approximations. In condensed-matter research, DWBA is used to analyze grazing-incidence small-angle scattering.
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