Overview of Scattering Theory
Definition and Scope
Scattering theory: study of particle and wave interactions with potentials or targets. Focus: asymptotic behavior, cross sections, and transition probabilities. Central in nuclear, atomic, molecular, and condensed matter physics.
Historical Context
Origins: classical wave scattering (Rayleigh, Mie). Quantum extension: Schrödinger equation solutions for scattering states (Born, Wheeler). Development of formal S-matrix theory (Wigner, Eisenbud).
Physical Significance
Describes collision experiments, reaction probabilities, and resonance phenomena. Basis for particle accelerator experiments, spectroscopy, and quantum transport.
"Scattering theory provides a bridge between observables and underlying quantum interactions." -- R.G. Newton
Mathematical Framework
Schrödinger Equation Setup
Time-independent Schrödinger equation: (H_0 + V)ψ = Eψ, with free Hamiltonian H_0 and potential V. Goal: find solutions ψ with specified asymptotic behavior.
Hilbert Space and Operators
States in Hilbert space ℋ. Operators: Hamiltonian H, momentum p, position r. Scattering operator S acts unitarily on asymptotic states.
Asymptotic Boundary Conditions
Scattering states: plane wave + outgoing spherical wave at infinity. Boundary conditions essential to separate incoming and scattered waves.
H = H_0 + V(H_0 + V) |ψ⟩ = E |ψ⟩|ψ^{(+)}⟩ → |φ⟩ + outgoing waves as r → ∞ Scattering States and Boundary Conditions
Free States and Distorted Waves
Free particle states |φ⟩: eigenstates of H_0. Scattering states |ψ^{(±)}⟩ incorporate interaction V and satisfy (E ± iε) boundary conditions for incoming (+) and outgoing (-) waves.
Incoming and Outgoing Waves
Wavefunction asymptotics: superposition of incident plane wave and scattered spherical wave. Outgoing wave characterized by spherical Hankel function.
Physical Interpretation
Incoming state: prepared beam. Outgoing state: detected scattered particles. Time-reversal symmetry relates |ψ^{(+)}⟩ and |ψ^{(-)}⟩.
ψ^{(+)}(r) ~ e^{ik·r} + f(θ,φ) (e^{ikr}/r) as r → ∞f(θ,φ): scattering amplitude Scattering Matrix (S-Matrix)
Definition and Properties
S-matrix: operator relating asymptotic incoming to outgoing states, S = Ω_+† Ω_-, unitary, encodes all scattering info.
Physical Meaning
Matrix elements S_fi give transition amplitudes from initial state i to final state f. Probability: |S_fi|².
Unitarity and Analyticity
Unitarity ensures probability conservation. Analytic continuation relates to resonances and bound states in complex energy plane.
| S-Matrix Property | Description |
|---|---|
| Unitarity | S†S = SS† = I; probability conserved |
| Hermitian Analyticity | S(E*) = S(E)†; symmetry in complex energy |
Partial Wave Analysis
Angular Momentum Decomposition
Expansion of scattering amplitude in spherical harmonics: f(θ) = ∑ (2l+1) f_l P_l(cosθ). Each partial wave labeled by angular momentum quantum number l.
Phase Shift Concept
Interaction modifies phase of each partial wave by δ_l. Phase shifts determine differential and total cross sections.
Low-Energy Scattering
S-wave (l=0) dominates at low energies. Threshold behavior governed by scattering length and effective range parameters.
f(θ) = (1/2ik) ∑_{l=0}^\infty (2l+1)(e^{2iδ_l} - 1) P_l(cosθ) Born Approximation
First-Order Approximation
Assumes scattering potential V weak enough for perturbative treatment. Scattering amplitude approximated by Fourier transform of V.
Validity and Limitations
Valid for short-range, weak potentials, and high energies. Fails near resonances or strong coupling.
Mathematical Expression
Amplitude f_Born(k',k) = -(2π²m/ħ²) ⟨k'|V|k⟩, with plane wave momentum states k, k'.
f_{Born}(k', k) = -\frac{2m}{\hbar^2} \frac{1}{4\pi} \int e^{i(q·r)} V(r) d^3rwhere q = k - k' Phase Shifts and Cross Sections
Relation to Observables
Phase shifts δ_l encode scattering information; determine partial and total cross sections via unitarity relations.
Differential Cross Section
dσ/dΩ = |f(θ)|², where f(θ) from partial waves or exact solution.
Total Cross Section
σ_tot = (4π/k²) ∑ (2l+1) sin² δ_l, summing contributions of all partial waves.
| Quantity | Formula |
|---|---|
| Differential Cross Section | dσ/dΩ = |f(θ)|² |
| Total Cross Section | σ_tot = (4π/k²) ∑_{l=0}^\infty (2l+1) sin² δ_l |
Lippmann-Schwinger Equation
Integral Formulation
Re-expresses Schrödinger equation as integral equation for scattering states: |ψ^{(±)}⟩ = |φ⟩ + G_0^{(±)} V |ψ^{(±)}⟩.
Green's Function Role
G_0^{(±)} = resolvent operator of free Hamiltonian; incorporates boundary conditions via ±iε prescription.
Iterative Solution and Born Series
Repeated substitution yields Born series expansion, systematic perturbation for scattering amplitude.
|ψ^{(±)}⟩ = |φ⟩ + \frac{1}{E - H_0 ± iε} V |ψ^{(±)}⟩ Optical Theorem
Statement
Relates imaginary part of forward scattering amplitude to total cross section: Im f(0) = (k/4π) σ_tot.
Physical Interpretation
Conservation of probability: forward scattering amplitude encodes loss of flux due to scattering.
Derivation from Unitarity
Follows from unitarity condition S†S = I and partial wave expansion.
σ_{tot} = \frac{4\pi}{k} \operatorname{Im} f(0) Applications in Quantum Physics
Nuclear Scattering
Analyzes neutron-proton and nucleon-nucleon interactions. Extracts nuclear potentials and resonance parameters.
Atomic and Molecular Collisions
Describes electron-atom scattering, photoionization, and chemical reaction dynamics.
Condensed Matter and Nanostructures
Scattering of electrons by impurities, quantum dots; basis for transport and localization phenomena.
Numerical Methods in Scattering
Partial Wave Numerical Integration
Numerical solution of radial Schrödinger equation for phase shifts using Runge-Kutta or Numerov methods.
Matrix Inversion Techniques
Discretization of Lippmann-Schwinger equation into linear algebra problem; solved by matrix inversion or iterative solvers.
Computational Challenges
Handling singularities, convergence of partial waves, and large basis sets for accurate cross sections.
Experimental Techniques
Beam Scattering Experiments
Preparation of monoenergetic particle beams and angle-resolved detection of scattered particles.
Neutron and Electron Scattering Facilities
Use of reactors, accelerators, and synchrotrons to generate projectiles with controlled energy and momentum.
Data Analysis and Inversion
Extracting phase shifts, potentials, and resonance parameters from measured differential cross sections.
References
- Newton, R. G., Scattering Theory of Waves and Particles, Springer-Verlag, 1982, pp. 1-600.
- Taylor, J. R., Scattering Theory: The Quantum Theory of Nonrelativistic Collisions, Dover Publications, 2006, pp. 1-400.
- Joachain, C. J., Quantum Collision Theory, North-Holland, 1975, pp. 1-550.
- Messiah, A., Quantum Mechanics, Vol. 1, North-Holland, 1961, pp. 1-700.
- Goldberger, M. L., Watson, K. M., Collision Theory, Wiley, 1964, pp. 1-700.