hello , can anyone give the formula of the differential cross section and the macro cross section because in each web i see a different notation thank you
There are very different formulas for the differential cross section that depend on what is more convenient for your particular case. However I found often usefull the formula for the differential cross section of a process "two particle in many particles":
where M is the matrix element of the process.
The total cross section is obviousli the integral of the differential cross section. However you usually define it as:
$$dN_r=dN_f \cdot \sigma \cdot n_b\cdot d$$
where N_r is the number of particles produced by the reaction, N_f is the number of particles in the beam, n_b is the density of targets and d is the thickness of the target.
You can find some usefull formulas and a very good treatment of this subject here: http://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~wit00103/ftip/Ch03.pdf
#3
queenstudy
101
0
thanks for the help but the first 2 formulas are new to me but the third is what i am looking for but there is another syntax for it i still don't remember it but thanks any way
Since E = mc^2, how can photons be massless? If a photon has no mass, then, according to Einstein's formula, its energy is given by E = 0 x c^2, which is 0. Yet, photons do have energy. This seems to be a complete contradiction. Please explain! Thank you.