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Manfred Hanke, August 2005: (guided by Prof. A. Sch fer) QED-Project Compton-scattering of the cosmic background radiation off a ultrarelativsitic cosmic proton – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: QED-Project


1
QED-Project
Manfred Hanke, August 2005
(guided by Prof. A. Schäfer)
Compton-scatteringof the cosmic background
radiation off a ultrarelativsitic cosmic proton
andpair productionby a (back-scattered) photon
2
Contents of this talk
0. Introduction- Cosmic background radiation-
Cosmic rays- Compton-scattering 1. Energy-loss
of a cosmic proton due to Compton-scattering-
Cross-section- Kinematics- Differential
probabilities- Mean energy-loss- Result 2. Mean
free path of a back-scattered photon-
Cross-section- Differential probabilities and
mean free path- Result 3. Summary
3
Cosmic background radiation
  • predicted by G. Gamow and R. Alpher in the 1940s
  • discovered by A. Penzias and R. W. Wilson in
    1964 (Nobelprize in 1978)

4
Cosmic background radiation
  • predicted by G. Gamow and R. Alpher in the 1940s
  • discovered by A. Penzias and R. W. Wilson in
    1964 (Nobelprize in 1978)

5
Cosmic rays
- discovered in 1912 by V. Hess (Nobelprize 1936)
- high-energy particles (up to 1020 eV)
- mostly (97) nucleons, especially protons,
?-particles
6
Fluxes of Cosmic Rays
Flux
(1 particle per m²s)
Knee(1 particle per m²year)
Ankle
(1 particle per km²year)
Energy
7
Cosmic rays
- discovered in 1912 by V. Hess (Nobelprize 1936)
- high-energy particles (up to 1020 eV)
- mostly (97) nucleons, especially protons,
?-particles
- origin solar eruptions, supernovae,
cosmic jets (from black holes / pulsars), ..., ?
  • Nucleons with energies higher than 51019 eV
    loose their energy by the GZK-effect
    (Greisen-Zatsepin-K
    uzmin)
  • ? p ? ? ? N ?

What is the energy-loss through
Compton-scattering?
8
QED -Compton-scattering
How to calculate Compton-scattering off a proton?
9
Contents of this talk
0. Introduction- Cosmic background radiation-
Cosmic rays- Compton-scattering 1. Energy-loss
of a cosmic proton due to Compton-scattering-
Cross-section- Kinematics- Differential
probabilities- Mean energy-loss- Result 2. Mean
free path of a back-scattered photon-
Cross-section- Differential probabilities and
mean free path- Result 3. Summary
10
The cross-section
To calculate the energy-loss through
Compton-scattering,one needs...
for Compton-scattering off a proton
the Ais defined as page-long integrals over two
Feynman parameters (!)
11
A1
, forexample, is given by
12
Where do these expressions come from?
  • ?EFT (Chiral Effective Field Theory)
  • The Heavy Baryon Chiral Perturbation Theory
  • only involves explicit pN degrees of freedom.

13
Where do these expressions come from?
  • ?EFT (Chiral Effective Field Theory)
  • The Heavy Baryon Chiral Perturbation Theory
  • only involves explicit pN degrees of freedom,
    whereas the Small Scale Expansion
    formalism includes
  • explicit spin 3/2 nucleon resonance degrees of
    freedom.

14
Where do these expressions come from?
  • ?EFT (Chiral Effective Field Theory)
  • The Heavy Baryon Chiral Perturbation Theory
  • only involves explicit pN degrees of freedom,
    whereas the Small Scale Expansion
    formalism includes
  • explicit spin 3/2 nucleon resonance degrees of
    freedom (and within that in my opinion very
    exotic couplings,
  • like ? N ? or ? ? N N, for which the
    parameters have
  • been fitted from experimental cross section
    data).

15
Problem
Here, the following abbreviations and constants
are used
16
The cross-section
20 nbarn ?
numericalresults for ? lt 130 MeV
17
Kinematics
To calculate the energy-loss through
Compton-scattering,one needs...
- for the energy-loss of the
proton
, z cos ?(proton, scattered
photon)cm
In the relativistic limit, one gets - for the
photon-energy in the center-of-mass-frame
Here is k energy of the cosmic background
photon, ? cos ?(proton, photon)lab
18
Differential probabilities
Now, one can calculate...
19
the differential probability
Now, as one has calculated
20
Spectrum of interacting photons
(Ep 1019 eV)
Do you see any difference to the Planck-spectrum?
21
spectrum of energy-loss
Now, as one has calculated
the differential probability,
one can look at the
For the numerical simulation, the ?-function is
realized by a histogram.
22
Spectrum of energy-loss
(Ep 1019 eV)
23
Spectrum of energy-loss
24
Spectrum of energy-loss
(Ep 1019 eV)
25
The mean energy-loss
? 5.3 MeV / ly for proton with Ep 1019 eV
Ep2
26
Result
1. Energy-loss of a cosmic proton
  • The low energy-loss is due to the small
    cross-section for Compton-scattering.
  • A mean energy-loss of 5.3 MeV / ly for 1019 eV-
    protons corresponds to a mean free path of 1.9
    1012 ly. (The mean distance between galaxies
    is of order 106 ly.)
  • Compton-scattering of the cosmic background
    radiation off such a ultra-high-energy cosmic
    proton therefore does not lead to a noticeable
    decceleration of cosmic rays.

The result is, that there is no result.
(what concerns the decceleration of cosmic
protons)
27
2. Mean free path of a back-scattered photon
But
The protons energy-loss (up to 1018 eV for Ep
1019 eV) is added to the photons energy. (This
is known as Compton-back-scattering / inverse
Compton-scattering,which is one way to produce
ultra-high-energy cosmic ?-rays.)
What happens with these high-energetic photons?
e / e - pair production from single photons is
not allowed, but they can interact with the
cosmic background radiation.
28
Contents of this talk
0. Introduction- Cosmic background radiation-
Cosmic rays- Compton-scattering 1. Energy-loss
of a cosmic proton due to Compton-scattering-
Cross-section- Kinematics- Differential
probabilities- Mean energy-loss- Result 2. Mean
free path of a back-scattered photon-
Cross-section- Differential probabilities and
mean free path- Result 3. Summary
29
The total cross-section
for e / e - pair production from two photons
30
The total cross-section
31
Differential probabilities
k0 3.21 109 MeV
kmax(CMB) ? kmax(?) ? maximum
32
Differential probabilities
k0 5 107 MeV
kmax(CMB) lt kmax(?) ? suppression by the
exp-factor
33
Differential probabilities
k0 1011 MeV
kmax(?) lt kmax(CMB)? suppression by the
k²-factor
34
Mean free path
rapid decrease of probability for k0 lt 5 108 MeV
dW/dL(k0 109 MeV) 2.52 10-5/ly dW/dL(k0
108 MeV) 2.28 10-9/ly dW/dL(k0 107 MeV)
1.60 10-54/ly
35
Mean free path
(slow) decrease of probability for k0 gt 1011 MeV
dW/dL(k0 1010 MeV) 3.0 10-5/lydW/dL(k0
1011 MeV) 9.4 10-6/ly dW/dL(k0 1012 MeV)
2.0 10-6/ly
36
Mean free path
minimal probability at k0 3.21 109 MeV
  • dW/dL 3.8 10-5/ly
  • maximal mean free pathltLgt 26 103 ly

37
Result
2. Mean free path of a back-scattered photon
The universe should be almost transparent for
very-high-energy ?-rays with k0 lt 1014 eV (at
least what concerns e/e-pair production) the
mean free paths are billions of lightyears!
Photons with ultra-high energies 21014 eV
lt k0 lt 1019 eV should interact with the cosmic
background radiationand create e/e-pairs
within less than 3 million ly, what is
approximately the mean distance of galaxies.
There should be no ultra-high-energy
extragalactic ?-rays! (Back-scattered photons
with these energies cant be observed.)
38
3. Summary
Contents of this talk
0. Introduction- Cosmic background radiation-
Cosmic rays- Compton-scattering 1. Energy-loss
of a cosmic proton due to Compton-scattering-
Cross-section- Kinematics- Differential
probabilities- Mean energy-loss- Result 2. Mean
free path of a back-scattered photon-
Cross-section- Differential probabilities and
mean free path- Result
39
Contents of this talk
0. Introduction- Cosmic background radiation-
Cosmic rays- Compton-scattering 1. Energy-loss
of a cosmic proton due to Compton-scattering-
Cross-section- Kinematics- Differential
probabilities- Mean energy-loss- Result 2. Mean
free path of a back-scattered photon-
Cross-section- Differential probabilities and
mean free path- Result 3. Summary
from ?EFT ? 20 nbarn
spectrum of energy-loss
40
Spectrum of a protons energy-loss due to
Compton-scattering
41
Contents of this talk
0. Introduction- Cosmic background radiation-
Cosmic rays- Compton-scattering 1. Energy-loss
of a cosmic proton due to Compton-scattering-
Cross-section from ?EFT ? 20 nbarn -
Kinematics- Differential probabilities spectrum
of energy-loss- Mean energy-loss -
Result 2. Mean free path of a back-scattered
photon- Cross-section- Differential
probabilities and mean free path-
Result 3. Summary
Ep2, but only 5.3 MeV / ly for Ep 1019
eV
42
Contents of this talk
0. Introduction- Cosmic background radiation-
Cosmic rays- Compton-scattering 1. Energy-loss
of a cosmic proton due to Compton-scattering-
Cross-section from ?EFT ? 20 nbarn -
Kinematics- Differential probabilities spectrum
of energy-loss- Mean energy-loss Ep2, but
only 5.3 MeV / ly for Ep 1019 eV -
Result 2. Mean free path of a back-scattered
photon- Cross-section- Differential
probabilities and mean free path-
Result 3. Summary
? 26 103 ly
(k0,min 3.21015 eV)
no ?-rays with 21014 eV lt k0 lt 1019 eV
43
Thats it!
Thank you very muchfor your attention!
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