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Homework Statement
An electron initially at rest is scattered by a photon.
a) Which scattering angle corresponds to the largest Compton shift and why?
b) At what minimum photon energy can half of the photon energy be transferred onto the electron?
Homework Equations
\Delta \lambda = \lambda_2 - \lambda_1 = \frac {h}{m_e c} (1 -cos\theta)
where \Delta \lambda is the compton shift, \lambda_2 and \lambda_1 are the final and initial photon wavelengths, m is the mass of the electron, c the speed of light, and \theta the scattering angle.
The Attempt at a Solution
a) Pretty straightforward, for a maximum shift \delta \lamba the (1 -cos\theta) must be a maximum, ie. cos\theta) = 0 which happens at 90 degrees.
b) I might be confused in understanding the question. Way I figured, is that the the initial photon kinetic energy is shared equally between the reflected photon and electron. So conservation of mechanical energy (without potential energy, electron initially at rest, K = hf for photon and K= 0.4mv² for electron)
h \frac {c}{\lambda_1} = h \frac {c}{\lambda_2} + 0.5 m v^2
So since the final energy of the photon is half the initial, that means the reflected photon and electron have equal resultant kinetic energies.
h \frac {c}{\lambda_1} = 2 h \frac {c}{\lambda_2} = m v^2
I'm still not getting what "minimum" is