Absorption cross section

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Oxford Dictionary of Biochemistry:

absorption cross-section

Top

the probability that a photon passing through a molecule will be absorbed by that molecule multiplied by the average cross-sectional area of the molecule. The net absorption cross-section (symbol: σnet) is defined by σnet = κ/NA, where κ is the molar napierian absorption coefficient and NA is the Avogadro constant.

Previous:absorption coefficient, absorption band, absorption
Next:absorption factor, absorption index, absorption line
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Absorption cross section

Top
Cross-sections values for all elements with atomic number Z smaller than 100 collected for photons with energies from 1 keV to 20 MeV. The discontinuities in the values are due to absorption edges which were also shown.

Absorption cross section is a measure for the probability of an absorption process. More generally, the term cross section is used in physics to quantify the probability of a certain particle-particle interaction, e.g., scattering, electromagnetic absorption, etc. (Note that light in this context is described as consisting of particles, i.e., photons.)

In the context of ozone shielding of ultraviolet light, absorption cross section is the ability of a molecule to absorb a photon of a particular wavelength and polarization. Analogously, in the context of nuclear engineering it refers to the probability of a particle (usually a neutron) being absorbed by a nucleus. Although the units are given as an area, it does not refer to an actual size area, at least partially because the density or state of the target molecule will affect the probability of absorption. Quantitatively, the number dN of photons absorbed, between the points x and x + dx along the path of a beam is the product of the number N of photons penetrating to depth x times the number n of absorbing molecules per unit volume times the absorption cross section σ:

\frac{dN}{dx}= -N n \sigma.

The absorption cross-section is closely related to mass absorption coefficient. For a given particle and its energy, the absorption cross-section of the target material can be calculated from mass absorption coefficient using:

\sigma= (\mu/\rho) m_a/N_A

where:


This is also commonly expressed as:

\sigma= \alpha/N

where:


See also

References

External links



Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

Copyrights:

Mentioned in

neutron hardening (nucleonics)
cadmium cutoff (nucleonics)
level width (quantum mechanics)