PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE
The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News
Number 837 August 29, 2007 by Phillip F. Schewe      www.aip.org/pnu

Quote:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
NUCLEAR ANTENNA.  A new calculation shows that x rays, produced at
machines planned or under construction, might be convertible into
gamma rays or other particles using a process that is analogous to
what  happens when radio waves strike an antenna.  In a conventional
antenna,
radio waves excite the motion of electrons over an extended region;
in a  rooftop antenna, for instance, electron interactions with
incoming radio waves are spread out over the size of the antenna,
typically a meter or more.  The concerted electron excitation is
then amplified into a
more energetic signal in a tuned circuit in a radio receiver set.
Michael Kuchiev, a physicist at the University of New South Wales
([EMAIL PROTECTED], 61-2-9385-4634) has contrived a nuclear
equivalent of all this, a process in which x rays can interact in an
*antenna* and be *amplified* into a new form of energy---in
the
form of particles.  Doing this requires just the right
circumstances.
The theory of quantum electrodynamics (QED) suggests that such
conversion of laser light, in the vicinity of an atomic nucleus, can
occur in strong electric fields on the order of 10^18 V/m and at
laser power densities of more than 10^29 W/cm^2. Such conditions
might be reached in upcoming x-ray free electron laser (FEL)
facilities.  In this kind of environment, with intense laser
electric fields interacting with the static electric field of an
atomic nucleus at a distance of 10^-4 nm, the successive absorption
of  hundreds or thousands of laser photons could be turned  into an
electron-positron pair.  This kind of pair production is fully
expected at the next generation of x-ray sources.  But according to
Kuchiev, further interesting things can be expected.  The
electron-positron pair is still immersed in the potent electric
field, he says, and prone to soak up still more energy (in analogy
to the concerted electron motion being amplified into a usable
signal in a radio), so much energy that the electron-positron pair
might even be turned into a pair of muons, the heavier cousins of
electrons (see figure at http://www.aip.org/png/2007/287.htm).   In
effect the nuclear-antenna phenomenon would be like having an
electron-positron collider the size of an atom. (Physical Review
Letters, upcoming article)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
end quote


Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/



Reply via email to