Discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons

We compute fully differential cross sections for double ionization of helium by electrons, within the high-impact-energy and low-momentum transfer regimes, using the generalized Sturmian functions approach. Our results are converged relative to the total angular momentum and variable domain size. Th...

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Publicado: 2015
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_10502947_v91_n1_p_Ambrosio
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_10502947_v91_n1_p_Ambrosio
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spelling paper:paper_10502947_v91_n1_p_Ambrosio2025-07-30T18:38:45Z Discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons Electron emission Helium Projectiles Convergent close-coupling calculations Electron emission energy Fully differential cross sections High impact energy Low momentum transfers Projectile target interaction Sturmian functions Theoretical methods Ionization We compute fully differential cross sections for double ionization of helium by electrons, within the high-impact-energy and low-momentum transfer regimes, using the generalized Sturmian functions approach. Our results are converged relative to the total angular momentum and variable domain size. The method shows very good agreement with convergent close coupling calculations performed by Kheifets et al. [J. Phys. B 32, 5047 (1999)JPAPEH0953-407510.1088/0953-4075/32/21/301] for all ejection angles for the two electron emission energies considered in the experiments reported in that contribution. Both theoretical methods provide fully differential cross sections that require the same upscaling factors to compare with experimental data and are based on a first-order Born model for the projectile-target interaction. Since that reference was published, there were several theoretical efforts to account for the absolute scale of the experimental results, but agreement in the cross-section magnitude was not achieved even between theories. With the present contribution we conclude that the first-order Born model is now adequately solved, shifting the magnitude controversy towards either the experimental data and/or the addition of higher degrees of projectile-target interaction to the calculation. © 2015 American Physical Society. 2015 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_10502947_v91_n1_p_Ambrosio http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_10502947_v91_n1_p_Ambrosio
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Electron emission
Helium
Projectiles
Convergent close-coupling calculations
Electron emission energy
Fully differential cross sections
High impact energy
Low momentum transfers
Projectile target interaction
Sturmian functions
Theoretical methods
Ionization
spellingShingle Electron emission
Helium
Projectiles
Convergent close-coupling calculations
Electron emission energy
Fully differential cross sections
High impact energy
Low momentum transfers
Projectile target interaction
Sturmian functions
Theoretical methods
Ionization
Discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons
topic_facet Electron emission
Helium
Projectiles
Convergent close-coupling calculations
Electron emission energy
Fully differential cross sections
High impact energy
Low momentum transfers
Projectile target interaction
Sturmian functions
Theoretical methods
Ionization
description We compute fully differential cross sections for double ionization of helium by electrons, within the high-impact-energy and low-momentum transfer regimes, using the generalized Sturmian functions approach. Our results are converged relative to the total angular momentum and variable domain size. The method shows very good agreement with convergent close coupling calculations performed by Kheifets et al. [J. Phys. B 32, 5047 (1999)JPAPEH0953-407510.1088/0953-4075/32/21/301] for all ejection angles for the two electron emission energies considered in the experiments reported in that contribution. Both theoretical methods provide fully differential cross sections that require the same upscaling factors to compare with experimental data and are based on a first-order Born model for the projectile-target interaction. Since that reference was published, there were several theoretical efforts to account for the absolute scale of the experimental results, but agreement in the cross-section magnitude was not achieved even between theories. With the present contribution we conclude that the first-order Born model is now adequately solved, shifting the magnitude controversy towards either the experimental data and/or the addition of higher degrees of projectile-target interaction to the calculation. © 2015 American Physical Society.
title Discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons
title_short Discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons
title_full Discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons
title_fullStr Discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons
title_full_unstemmed Discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons
title_sort discrepancy between theory and experiment in double ionization of helium by fast electrons
publishDate 2015
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_10502947_v91_n1_p_Ambrosio
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_10502947_v91_n1_p_Ambrosio
_version_ 1840320985787531264