What is the collision energy and wavelength in a photon-photon scattering event?

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The discussion revolves around calculating the center of mass (CM) velocity and collision energy in a photon-photon scattering event involving two laser beams of different wavelengths. The user is attempting to apply relativistic mechanics to determine the CM frame where the photons have the same frequency and opposite directions. They calculated the CM velocity to be approximately 0.2c, with a direction of about 70.5 degrees above the positive x-axis. The user also explored the Doppler effect to find the wavelengths of the photons after interaction, noting discrepancies in their calculations. The final parts of the assignment require determining the collision wavelength and energy in the CM system, leading to a question about the relationship between collision energy and frequency.
wukunlin
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This is an assignment I'm doing that is due next month but I would like to make an early start because I find most of the materials in this assignment unfamiliar.

The whole questions is composed of 5 parts, most of them I have a rough idea of but there are some bits and pieces I don't really know about since its been a year since my last quantum mechanics paper and 2 years since I last had a lecture in relativistic effects.

The problem is to do with two 5mW laser beams points at each other as shown in the attached picture as the red and green arrows, representing laser beams of 650nm and 532nm respectively. The orange bits are where the photons interact.

So the first part of the problem.

Homework Statement


Calculate the velocity (magnitude and direction) of the CM (I assume centre of mass) System.

Homework Equations


E=h\nu
and
m=\frac{E}{c^2}
for relativistic mass

The Attempt at a Solution


I think to work out the direction I can just treat the photon like two point particles in classical mechanics, which will be similar to the black arrow I have drawn but leaning towards the particle with more relativistic mass.
The magnitude is something I'm not sure about. In classical mechanics, knowing the directions means I can just use geometry to work out the magnitude, but in this case I believe I need to take relativistic effects into account since photons travel at the speed of light.
I looked at this: http://www.numericana.com/answer/relativity.htm#photons
but I'm not sure if that is relavent.

I have also looked at this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass–energy_equivalence#Massless_particles
That doesn't seem to tell me anyway about the velocity of the CoM though,
unless, the CoM also move at the speed of light?
 

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hi wukunlin! :smile:
wukunlin said:
… I believe I need to take relativistic effects into account since photons travel at the speed of light …

that's correct :smile:

the simplest way to find the CM frame (and yes, that does mean centre of mass) is to note that it's the frame in which the photons have the same frequency (and opposite directions) :wink:
 
tiny-tim said:
he simplest way to find the CM frame (and yes, that does mean centre of mass) is to note that it's the frame in which the photons have the same frequency (and opposite directions) :wink:

ah, that makes sense. Looks like I was overthinking a bit. thanks tim

What puzzled me earlier was that I had the same misconception of OP in this thread, I was thinking that I might run into problems with the possibility of their separation distance changing by >c in the CM frame.
 
arrrgghh, not quite working

so the red laser shoots from right to left, I say along the x axis, the green laser shoots from left to right with 20 degree angle pointing upwards, I did the following:

let the red and green photon's effective mass be:
<br /> m_r = \frac{h}{c \times 650nm}<br /> m_g = \frac{h}{c \times 532nm}<br />
their instantaneous positions:
<br /> \vec r_r = \left[ \begin{array}{c} x_r(t) \\ y_r(t) \end{array} \right] = \left[ \begin{array}{c} -ct \\ 0 \end{array} \right]<br />
<br /> \vec r_g = \left[ \begin{array}{c} x_g(t) \\ y_g(t) \end{array} \right] = \left[ \begin{array}{c} ct \: sin 20^O \\ ct \: cos 20^O \end{array} \right]<br />

and for the centre of mass:

<br /> \vec r_{cm} = \frac{m_r \vec r_r + m_g \vec r_g}{m_r+m_g} = \frac{ct}{m_r+m_g}\left[ \begin{array}{c} m_g \: cos 20^O - m_r \\ m_g \: sin 20^O \end{array} \right]<br />
<br /> \vec v_{cm} = \frac{d \vec r_{cm}}{dt} = <br /> \vec r_{cm} = \frac{m_r \vec r_r + m_g \vec r_g}{m_r+m_g} = \frac{c}{m_r+m_g}\left[ \begin{array}{c} m_g \: cos 20^O - m_r \\ m_g \: sin 20^O \end{array} \right]<br />
the velocity I worked out has magnitude of around 0.2c, direction is around 70.5 degrees above the positive x-axis

I plotted the trajectory of the photons and the CoM, they look okay, at all points the CoM, green photon and red photon are colinear and lean towards the green photon

I then tested to see if both photons appear to have the same wavelength, using the doppler shift formula:
<br /> \frac{\lambda_o}{\lambda_s}=\frac{\sqrt{1+v/c}}{\sqrt{1-v/c}}<br />
for the green photon, because the green photon is 'chasing' the observer so the wavelengh appears longer. the speed v in this case is 0.2*cos(50.5) ie the projection of the CoM velocity on the velocity of the photon.
What I did for the red photon is a similar process.

my problem is the green photon becomes 604nm after the doppler shift, the red photon becomes 608nm after the doppler shift. all calculations are done in MATLAB without any rounding, have I done something wrong? :rolleyes:
 

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nevermind
I didn't know there was such thing as transverse doppler effect, taking that into account and turns out my answer is correct
 
oh, another questions.

The next two parts of the assignment involves calculating the collision wavelength \lambda _{CM} and the collision energy \sqrt{s} in CM system

since the net momentum in CM system is zero, wouldn't the collision energy just be the collision frequency multiplied by the Planck's constant?
 
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