What Are the Real and Imaginary Parts of Delbruck Scattering?

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SUMMARY

Delbruck Scattering involves the interaction of photons with the Coulomb field of a nucleus, resulting in the creation and annihilation of real and virtual electron-positron pairs. This process can occur at energies below 1.022 MeV, which is the threshold for pair production. The discussion highlights the significance of real and imaginary parts of scattering amplitudes, as established by Kasten in 1986, and raises questions about their implications on scattering behavior at lower energies. Specifically, it inquires whether the relationship between real and imaginary parts affects the occurrence of D-scattering below the pair production threshold.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of Delbruck Scattering and its mechanisms
  • Knowledge of scattering amplitudes and their real and imaginary components
  • Familiarity with photon interactions in nuclear physics
  • Basic concepts of virtual and real particles in quantum field theory
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the mathematical formulation of scattering amplitudes in quantum field theory
  • Explore the implications of virtual particles in low-energy scattering processes
  • Study Kasten's 1986 work on Delbruck Scattering for deeper insights
  • Investigate the relationship between scattering cross sections and particle interactions
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Physicists, particularly those specializing in quantum mechanics and nuclear physics, as well as students and researchers interested in the intricacies of photon-nucleus interactions and scattering phenomena.

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My question here involves Delbruck Scattering specifically but my curiosity is more general. Delbruck Scattering is the scattering of a photon off of the Coulomb field of a nucleus via the creation and annihilation of real and virtual electron-positron pairs. The process can occur at energies below 1.022 MeV, the pair production threshold. I know that Delbruck scattering has real and imaginary scattering amplitudes (Kasten, 1986). My question then is two-fold,

1) What does it mean that a scattering amplitude has a real part and an imaginary part?

2) Does one or the other part (Re or Im) have any bearing on the fact that D-scattering can occur below 1.022 MeV, i.e. at these lower energies I would assume the particles are virtual, does that mean that the real part of the scattering amplitude was smaller than the Imaginary part? Is there any relationship between the realness or virtualness of particles and the realness or imaginariness of the cross section for their production?
 
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Thanks for the post! Sorry you aren't generating responses at the moment. Do you have any further information, come to any new conclusions or is it possible to reword the post?
 

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