What Is the Minimum Energy of a Photon in a Compton Collision with a Proton?

AI Thread Summary
In a Compton collision involving a proton at rest and a photon, the key focus is on calculating the minimum energy of the incident photon given the proton's recoil kinetic energy of 4.5 MeV. Energy and momentum conservation principles are applied, leading to the equations E_0 + E_1 = E_2 + E_3 and p_0 + p_1 = p_2 + p_3, where the photon is massless. The discussion emphasizes the need to use the relationship between the scattered photon energy and the scattering angle to solve for the unknowns. The minimum energy scenario is debated, with clarification that a photon cannot exist without energy and momentum. The conversation highlights the importance of correctly applying the relevant equations to derive the desired outcome.
vsage
For some reason I don't feel like I was given all of the information on this question:

A proton at rest is struck by a photon in a Compton collision. If the recoil kinetic energy of the proton is 4.5 MeV, what is the minimum energy of the incident photon (in MeV)? (Take the mass of the proton to be 938 MeV/c2.)

I applied energy conservation but it didn't seem to work. (Yes the title is misleading, I confused it with something else)
 
Physics news on Phys.org
It's an elastic collision.Both energy & momentum are conserved.Write the balance of energy:total energy before=total energy after.

The photon is massless.

Daniel.
 
Alright so then I have by conservation of energy: (subscript 0 = photon initial 1 = proton initial 2 = proton final 3 = photon final)

E_0 + E_1 = E_2 + E_3
p_0c + 938 = 938 + 4.5 + p_3c

and conservation of momentum

p_0 + p_1 = p_2 + p_3, p_1 = 0
p_0 = p_2 + p_3

p_2c can be rewritten in terms of kinetic energy and the mass of a proton as p_2c = \sqrt{{KE}^2 + 2KEm_pc^2}

and, calculating it out, I get p_2c = 92 MeV
so now I have p_0c = 92 + p_3c

What can I do with this? substituting in 92 doesn't make any sense really. I think I did something wrong somewhere. I did assume a 1 dimensional collision though. I could probably work something in 2 dimensions but I don't see the relevance at this point.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Do you agree that
p_{0}c=4.5MeV+p_{3}c ...?

Daniel.

P.S.What does the problem ask you...?
 
Right. The minimum energy I would have thought would have been where the photon has no momentum after collision (and therefore no energy), but p_0c = 4.5 doesn't appear to be the answer according to this computer script. This is probably such a silly question too.
 
vsage said:
The minimum energy I would have thought would have been where the photon has no momentum after collision (and therefore no energy)

Uh, if a photon has no energy and momentum, it doesn't even exist! :eek:

You also need to use the equation that relates the scattered photon energy to the scattering angle:

\frac{1}{E'} - \frac{1}{E} = \frac {1}{m_p c^2}(1 - \cos \theta)

where E is the incoming photon energy and E' is the scattered photon energy. You've seen this equation or something like it (probably using wavelength instead of energy), right?

Your desired outcome corresponds to a particular scattering angle in the range of 0 to 180 degrees. Deduce that angle somehow, and together with the energy conservation equation, you have two equations in the two unknowns E and E'.
 
I had originally been using that formula jtbell, but i had been plugging in the proton's energies for some reason. It's good to hear confirmation though!. I'll see what I can do with it by combining that dextercioby said with that. Thanks guys!
 
Back
Top