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Special Topics

EPJ D Highlight - Electron-impact ionization calculations match with experiments

Visualising electron-impact ionization cross-sections

Through a new calculation approach, researchers have made far more accurate predictions of how atoms are ionized when impacted by high-energy electrons.

During electron-impact ionization (EII), high-energy electrons collide with atoms, knocking away one or more of their outer electrons. To calculate the probability that ionization will occur during these impacts, researchers use a quantity named the ionization ‘cross-section’. EII is among the main processes affecting the balance of charges in hot plasma, but so far, its cross-section has proven incredibly difficult to study through theoretical calculations.

Through new research published in EPJ D, Stefan Schippers and colleagues at Justus-Liebig University of Giessen, Germany, present new calculations for the EII cross-section, which closely match with their experimental results. Their discoveries could provide useful new insights in many fields of research where hot plasma is studied: including astrophysics and controlled nuclear fusion.

So far, EII cross-sections have proven especially challenging to calculate for two key reasons: the complex interactions which can emerge between the electrons involved in the process, and the wide array of possible electron configurations in the atoms being impacted.

In their study, Schippers’ team tackled these challenges by accounting for several important aspects of the EII process in their calculations: including the relativistic properties of fast-moving electrons, and quantum-scale interactions between electrons and ions. Rather than focusing on the individual electron configurations of the atoms being impacted, they also considered the average effect of many different electronic configurations.

The researchers tested their approach by calculating both the single- and double-EII cross-sections of multiply charged xenon ions, across a broad range of collision energies. They then compared these theoretical values with real experimental results. In most cases, their theoretical cross-sections agreed closely with their experiments – only becoming less accurate at lower collision energies, on the threshold of where ionization can occur. Based on this success, Schippers and colleagues now hope their approach could offer important guidance for EII cross-section calculations in future studies.

Managing Editors
Sandrine Karpe and Vijala Kiruvanayagam (EDP Sciences) and Sabine Lehr (Springer-Verlag)
Dear Sabine,
For me it was a great pleasure to work with you, Christian and Isabelle. All questions have been resolved very fast. And amiability and competence of Isabelle are inestimable. Best regards,

Natasha Kirova, CNRS & University Paris Sud, Orsay, France
Editor EPJ Special Topics 222/5, 2013

ISSN: 1951-6355 (Print Edition)
ISSN: 1951-6401 (Electronic Edition)

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