In
physics, 'Compton scattering' or the 'Compton effect', is the decrease in
energy (increase in
wavelength) of an
X-ray or
gamma ray photon, when it interacts with matter. 'Inverse Compton scattering' also exists, where the photon gains energy (decreasing in wavelength) upon interaction with matter. The amount the wavelength increases by is called the 'Compton shift'. Although
nuclear compton scattering exists, Compton scattering usually refers to the interaction involving only the
electrons of an
atom. The Compton effect was observed by
Arthur Holly Compton in
1923 and further verified by his graduate student
Y. H. Woo in the years followed. Arthur Compton earned the
1927 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery.
The effect is important because it demonstrates that light cannot be explained purely as a
wave phenomenon.
Thomson scattering, the classical theory of an
electromagnetic wave scattered by charged particles, cannot explain any shift in wavelength. Light must behave as if it consists of particles in order to explain the Compton scattering. Compton's experiment convinced physicists that light can behave as a stream of particles whose energy is proportional to the frequency.
The interaction between electrons and high
energy photons results in the electron being given part of the energy (making it recoil), and a photon containing the remaining energy being emitted in a different direction from the original, so that the overall
momentum of the system is conserved. If the photon still has enough energy left, the process may be repeated. If the photon has sufficient energy (in general a few
eV, right around the energy of
visible light), it can even eject an electron from its host atom entirely (a process known as the
Photoelectric effect).
The Compton shift formula
:''For differential cross section of Compton scattering, see''
Klein-Nishina formula.
Compton used a combination of three fundamental formulas representing the various aspects of classical and modern physics, combining them to describe the quantum behavior of light.
★ Light as a particle, as noted previously in the
photoelectric effect.
★ Relativistic dynamics
Special Theory of Relativity
★ Trigonometry -
Law of cosines
The final result gives us the 'Compton scattering equation':
:
where
:
is the wavelength of the photon 'before' scattering,
:
is the wavelength of the photon 'after' scattering,
:''m
e'' is the mass of the electron,
:''θ'' is the angle by which the photon's heading changes,
:''h'' is
Planck's constant, and
:''c'' is the
speed of light.
:''h/(m
ec)''=2.43×10
-12 meters, is known as the
Compton wavelength.
Derivation
Begin with energy and momentum conservation:
::
::
:where
::
and
are the energy and momentum of the photon and
::
and
are the energy and momentum of the electron.
Solving (1)
Now we fill in for the energy part:
:
:
We solve this for p
e':
:
:
Solving (2)
Rearrange equation (2)
::
and square it to see
::
::
::
::
Putting it together
Then we have two equations for
(eq 3 & 4), which we equate:
:
Now, one simplifies. First by multiplying both sides by ''c''
2:
:
Next, multiply out the right-hand side:
:
A few terms cancel from both sides, so we have
:
Then divide both sides by '
' to see
:
:
Now divide both sides by
and then by
:
:
Now the left-hand side can be rewritten as simply
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This is equivalent to the 'Compton scattering equation', but it is usually written using
's rather than
's. To make that switch use
::
so that finally,
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|
|}
Applications
Compton scattering
Compton scattering is of prime importance to
radiobiology, as it happens to be the most probable interaction of high energy X rays with atomic nuclei in living beings and is applied in
radiation therapy.
In material physics, Compton scattering can be used to probe the
wave function of the electrons in matter in the momentum representation.
Compton Scatter is an important effect in
Gamma spectroscopy which gives rise to the
Compton edge, as it is possible for the gamma rays to scatter out of the detectors used.
Compton suppression is used to detect stray scatter gamma rays to counteract this effect.
Inverse Compton scattering
Inverse Compton scattering is important in
astrophysics. In
X-ray astronomy, the
accretion disk surrounding a
black hole is believed to produce a thermal spectrum. The lower energy photons produced from this spectrum are scattered to higher energies by relativistic electrons in the surrounding
corona. This is believed to cause the power law component in the X-ray spectra (0.2-10 keV) of accreting black holes.
The effect is also observed when photons from the
Cosmic microwave background move through the hot gas surrounding a
galaxy cluster. The CMB photons are scattered to higher energies by the electrons in this gas, resulting in the
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect.
See also
★
Thomson scattering
★
Klein-Nishina formula
★
Photoelectric effect
★
Pair production
★
Timeline of cosmic microwave background astronomy
★
Peter Debye
★
Walther Bothe
★
List of astronomical topics
★
List of physics topics
★
Washington University in St. Louis (Site of discovery)
External links
★
''Compton Effect'' (PDF file) by Michael Brandl for
Project PHYSNET.
★
''A Quantum Theory of the Scattering of X-Rays by Light Elements'' - the original 1923 ''
Physical Review'' paper by Arthur H. Compton (on the
AIP website).