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cross section

 
Dictionary: cross section  cross-sec·tion (krôs'sĕk'shən, krŏs'-)
also n.
    1. A section formed by a plane cutting through an object, usually at right angles to an axis.
    2. A piece so cut or a graphic representation of such a piece.
  1. Physics. A measure of the probability that an encounter between particles will result in the occurrence of a particular atomic or nuclear reaction. Also called collision cross section.
  2. Statistics. A sample meant to be representative of a whole population.
  3. Informal. A variety; a diversity.
cross-sectional cross'-sec'tion·al (krôs'sĕk'shə-nəl, krŏs'-) adj.

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In nuclear physics, a measure of the probability that a given atomic nucleus will exhibit a specific reaction (absorption, scattering, or nuclear fission) in relation to a particular incident particle. Cross section is expressed in terms of area, and its value is chosen so that, if the bombarding particle hits a circular target of this size perpendicular to its path and centred at the nucleus, the given reaction occurs. If it misses the area, the reaction does not occur. The unit of cross section is the barn, which equals 10-24 sq cm. Cross-section values for a given nucleus depend on the energy of the bombarding particle and the kind of reaction and are often different from the actual cross-sectional area of the nucleus.

For more information on cross section, visit Britannica.com.

Geography Dictionary: cross-section
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1. A representation of a vertical section across and through a landscape or landscape feature, as in a cross-valley profile—a section of a valley drawn at right angles to the course of a river at a given point.

2. A ‘snapshot’ of society and its landscape at one point in time to reconstruct a past geography.

Architecture: cross section
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A representation of a building, or portion thereof, drawn as if it were cut vertically to show its interior; often taken at right angles to the longitudinal axis of the building.


Wikipedia: Cross section (physics)
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In nuclear and particle physics, the concept of a cross section is used to express the likelihood of interaction between particles.

When particles are thrown against a foil made of a certain substance, the cross section σ is a hypothetical area measure around the target particles (usually its atoms) that represents a surface. If a particle of the beam crosses this surface, there will be some kind of interaction.

The term is derived from the purely classical picture of (a large number of) point-like projectiles directed to an area that includes a solid target. Assuming that an interaction will occur (with 100% probability) if the projectile hits the solid, and not at all (0% probability) if it misses, the total interaction probability for the single projectile will be the ratio of the area of the section of the solid (the cross section, represented by σ) to the total targeted area.

This basic concept is then extended to the cases where the interaction probability in the targeted area assumes intermediate values - because the target itself is not homogeneous, or because the interaction is mediated by a non-uniform field. A particular case is scattering.

Contents

Scattering

In scattering, a differential cross section is defined by the probability to observe a scattered particle in a given quantum state per solid angle unit, such as within a given cone of observation, if the target is irradiated by a flux of one particle per surface unit:

{d \sigma \over d \Omega}={\frac{\hbox{Scattered flux}}{\hbox{Incident flux}}\times\hbox{Unit of surface} \over \hbox{Unit of solid angle}}

To put it another way, it is the rate of scattering events (Ns / Δt) normalized to the beam intensity (Nb / Δt), the target density (ρt), the length of the beam-target interaction region (lbt), the geometrical "size" of detector ((ΔΩ)d), and the "counting" efficiency of the detector (fd).

{d \sigma \over d \Omega}={ {(N_s / \Delta t)} \over {(N_b / \Delta t) \times \rho_t \times l_{bt} \times (\Delta \Omega)_d \times f_d}}

If the detector is small and sufficiently far from the target, then the geometrical "size" of the detector is given by:

 (\Delta \Omega)_d = { {A_d} \over {4 \pi r_{td}^2} } 
= {\hbox{physical area of the face of the detector} \over \hbox{surface area of a sphere with a radius equal to the target-detector distance} }

The integral cross section is the integral of the differential cross section on the whole sphere of observation (4π steradian):

\sigma=\int d\Omega \, {d \sigma \over d \Omega}.

A cross section is therefore a measure of the effective surface area seen by the impinging particles, and as such is expressed in units of area. Usual units are the cm2, the barn (1 b = 10−28 m2) and the corresponding submultiples: the millibarn (1 mb = 10−3 b), the microbarn (1 μb = 10−6 b), the nanobarn ( 1 nb = 10−9 b), the picobarn (1 pb = 10−12 b), and the shed (1 shed = 10−24 b). The cross section of two particles (i.e. observed when the two particles are colliding with each other) is a measure of the interaction event between the two particles. The cross section is proportional to the probability that an interaction will occur; for example in a simple scattering experiment the number of particles scattered per unit of time (current of scattered particles Ir) depends only to the number of incident particles per unit of time (current of incident particles Ii), to the characteristics of target (for example the number of particles per unit of surface N) and to the type of interaction expressed to the cross section.

I_r=I_iN\sigma\,
\sigma={{I_r}\over{I_i}}{{1}\over{N}}={\hbox{Probability of interaction}}\times{{1}\over{N}}

Relation to the S matrix

If the reduced masses and momenta of the colliding system are mi, \vec{p}_i and mf, \vec{p}_f before and after the collision respectively, the differential cross section is given by


{d\sigma \over d\Omega} = (2\pi)^4 m_i m_f {p_f \over p_i} |T_{fi}|^2,

where the on-shell T matrix is defined by


S_{fi} 
= 
\delta_{fi} 
- 
2\pi i \delta(E_f -E_i)
\delta(\vec{p}_i-\vec{p}_f) T_{fi}

in terms of the S matrix. The δ function is the distribution called the Dirac delta function. The computation of the S matrix is the main aim of the scattering theory.

Nuclear physics

In nuclear physics, it is convenient to express the probability of a particular event by a cross section. Statistically, the centers of the atoms in a thin foil can be considered as points evenly distributed over a plane. The center of an atomic projectile striking this plane has geometrically a definite probability of passing within a certain distance r of one of these points. In fact, if there are n atomic centers in an area A of the plane, this probability is (nπr2) / A, which is simply the ratio of the aggregate area of circles of radius r drawn around the points to the whole area. If we think of the atoms as impenetrable steel discs and the impinging particle as a bullet of negligible diameter, this ratio is the probability that the bullet will strike a steel disc, i.e., that the atomic projectile will be stopped by the foil. If it is the fraction of impinging atoms getting through the foil which is measured, the result can still be expressed in terms of the equivalent stopping cross section of the atoms. This notion can be extended to any interaction between the impinging particle and the atoms in the target. For example, the probability that an alpha particle striking a beryllium target will produce a neutron can be expressed as the equivalent cross section of beryllium for this type of reaction.

See also

References

  • R.G. Newton. Scattering Theory of Waves and Particles. McGraw Hill, 1966.

External links


Translations: Cross-section
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - vinkelret snit, tværsnit, tværkvantum

Français (French)
n. - coupe transversale, (fig) échantillon de

Deutsch (German)
n. - Querschnitt

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - διατομή, εγκάρσια τομή, (μτφ.) αντιπροσωπευτικό δείγμα

Italiano (Italian)
spaccato, sezione trasversale, campione

Português (Portuguese)
n. - corte (m) transversal

Русский (Russian)
поперечное сечение

Español (Spanish)
n. - corte transversal, sección

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - genomskärning, tvärsnitt

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
横断面, 横截面图

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 橫斷面, 橫截面圖

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 횡단, 단면도

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 横断面, 標本

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮חתך-רוחב‬


Best of the Web: cross section
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Some good "cross section" pages on the web:


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Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Geography Dictionary. A Dictionary of Geography. Copyright © Susan Mayhew 1992, 1997, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Architecture. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cross section (physics)" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more