How to Find Velocity of 10 MeV Alpha Particle for Scattering Calculation?

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the cross-section for scattering a 10 MeV alpha particle by a gold nucleus, the relevant equation involves the initial velocity, v_0, which needs to be determined. The energy of the alpha particle is purely kinetic, as its rest mass is significantly higher than 10 MeV. The correct approach to find v_0 involves using the relativistic energy-momentum relationship, E^2 = p^2 c^2 + m^2 c^4, rather than classical equations. At this energy level, the classical approximation is valid since the kinetic energy is much less than the rest energy. Understanding these principles is crucial for accurately solving the scattering problem.
SUDOnym
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Hello
I actually wanted to posted this in the "Homework" section but it is currently working for me..

The problem is:

Calculate the cross-section for the scattering of a 10 MeV alpha particle by a gold nucleus _{79}^{197}Au through an angle greater than (a) 10 degrees (b) 20 degrees c 30 degrees.

My answer:

I know the relevant equation is:

\sigma=\pi(\frac{Zze^{2}}{4\pi\epsilon_{0}mv_{0}^{2}}\cot\frac{\theta}{2})^{2}

so its really just a plug and chug kind of problem... only thing I can't figure out is how to get the value for v_0... i know that is hidden somewhere in the fact that it is a 10 Mev particle and I assume E=mc^2 plays a roll too... but trying the following does not provide me with a useful value of v_o:

E=mc^{2}+\frac{1}{2}mv_{0}^{2}

neither does:

E=\frac{1}{2}mv_{0}^{2}

so my question is, how do I find the value of v_0 given that I know its an alpha particlee (so I know its mass) and also that I know its 10Mev particle?

Many Thanks!
 
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What is "v_0" ?
 
v_0 is the initial velocity that the alpha particle has before any interaction with the gold nucleus..
 
The correct relativistic relationship between energy and momentum is
E^2 = p^2 c^2 + m^2 c^4

Here m is the invariant mass (in the rest frame) and p =mv.
From this you can find p and then v.
 
Thanks! to clarify though, the energy E, that I want to use will be the 10MeV...?
 
I think the 10 MeV should be just the kinetic energy. The rest energy of a proton is about 900 MeV so the 10 MeV cannot include the rest mass of the alpha particle.
The kinetic energy is
E^2 - m^2 c^4 = p^2 c^2

Actually at this energy the classic approximation should work quite well as KE<<E.
 
thanks, nasu. E=1/2mv^2 was my initial try but I kept making arithmetic mistakes which is why I came on here... took me at least two hours to get the correct answer for the cross-section!
 
SUDOnym said:
it is a 10 Mev particle and I assume E=mc^2 plays a roll too...
Nope! Rest mass of \alpha-particle is 3.7GeV, so if you are speaking about 10MeV \alpha, it is its pure kinetic energy, and you have pretty non-relativistic case.
 
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