Resonant (RTE) and Non Resonant (NTE) Transfer Excitation in 4 MeV B4 collisions with H2, He and Ar studied by zero-degree Auger projectile electron spectroscopy T.J.M. Zouros , E.P. Benis† , A.D. González† , T.G. Lee† , P. Richard† and T.W. Gorczyca † Department of Physics, University of Crete and IESL-FORTH, P.O. Box 2208, 71003 Heraklion, Crete, Greece James R. Macdonald Laboratory, Department of Physics, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506-2604 Department of Physics, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI 49008 Abstract. It is well known that for very asymmetric collisions between a highly charged ion and H2 near the RTE resonance, NTE is practically negligible. However, even though the interplay between RTE and NTE and their possible interference has been addressed formally and more recently by concrete calculations, experimentally very little work has been done on fast collision systems of increasing symmetry. We report on recent Auger electron RTE/NTE double differential cross section measurements of H-like B4 ions in 4 MeV collisions with H2 , He and Ar gas targets. Calculations using an atomic orbital close coupling (AOCC) method indicate NTE to be negligible for B4 collisions with H2 , but possibly substantial (depending on screening considerations) for He and Ar targets. R-matrix calculations are also presented for elastic (resonant and non-resonant) electron scattering from B4 . Within the electron scattering model (ESM), the active target electron can be considered to scatter as a free particle with a momentum distribution governed by its Compton profile. Thus, a single R-matrix calculation combined with the individual momentum distribution of each target should be sufficient to describe the RTE process. While this is found to be the case for H2 and He, results for Ar are not in such good agreement, even allowing for the possibility of destructive RTE-NTE interference. INTRODUCTION the projectile, (as viewed from the projectile frame), the “quasi-free” target electron can be considered to scatter from the projectile ion as a free particle with a momentum distribution (due to its orbital motion around the target) given by its Compton profile. The quasi-free target electron may also scatter elastically without forming bound resonant states. This process is just a particular case of target ionization in ionatom collisions giving rise to the well-known Binary Encounter electron (BEe) peak. Its free electron analogue is the process of non-resonant elastic scattering. The production of BEe has been extensively studied over the past ten years, investigating the dynamics of small impact parameter collisions (for recent reviews, see Refs. [12, 13]). Simple scattering models have been found to be adequate for an accurate prediction of the BEe peak shape, magnitude and position [14, 15, 16, 17, 18]. Recently, a coherent RTEA (RTE followed by Auger decay)-BEe treatment [19] has been made possible by combining R-matrix calculations with the ESM [19, 20]. Combined resonant and non-resonant elastic scattering R-matrix calculations have been shown to be successful in treating scattering of quasi-free electrons of H2 from H-like ions (Z=5-9) [20, 11] and from He-like B3 ions Transfer-excitation (TE) in energetic ion-atom collisions is a two-electron process involving the transfer of a target electron to the projectile with the simultaneous excitation of a projectile electron (in the same collision), giving rise to doubly-excited states. If the excitation is due to the Coulomb interaction between the transferred and projectile electrons, TE is a correlated process known as RTE [1, 2, 3, 4]. TE can also occur by uncorrelated one-electron excitation and transfer events mediated by electron-nucleus interactions, in which case it is referred to as NTE [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]. The study of TE, and in particular of RTE, has received considerable attention in the last fifteen years [3, 4] since it can provide direct information on electron correlation phenomena of great and continuing interest in atomic physics. Theoretically, RTE has been successfully described by the impulse approximation (IA) [8, 1, 9] within the framework of the ESM [10, 11]. To the extent that the active target electron can be considered free, RTE can be seen as the analogue of the time-reversed Auger effect [1]. Thus, in collisions where the velocity, vt , of the target electron is much smaller than the velocity, Vp , of CP680, Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry: 17th Int'l. Conference, edited by J. L. Duggan and I. L. Morgan © 2003 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0149-7/03/$20.00 36 R [11]. The H2 target is well-known to have negligible contributions from NTE [21, 22] in very asymmetric collisions. However, as shown in recent calculations [21], as the target atomic number Z increases, e.g. with He and Ar targets, NTE is expected to play an increasingly important role and may even destructively interfere with RTE [9, 21]. NTEA (NTE followed by Auger decay) contributions are expected to only affect the production of the bound doubly-excited states, but not the BEe part of the electron spectrum. Contributions from processes described by quasi-free scattering (RTEA and BEe) should be proportional to the R-matrix elastic scattering singledifferential cross-section (SDCS). Processes due to the influence of the target nucleus, lying outside the ESM frame work, however, will not be proportional to this SDCS. Thus, by comparing the measured double differential cross sections (DDCS) to the R-matrix calculations, any observed differences should be attributable to other processes outside the ESM, such as NTE. In this study, we report on high resolution RTEA measurements of the B3 2l2l doubly excited states, formed in collisions of 3.92 MeV B4 with H2 , He and Ar targets performed by zero-degree Auger projectile electron spectroscopy (ZAPS) [16]. Absolute DDCS were obtained by normalizing to Rutherford scattering BEe measurements for 13 MeV B5 + H2 . R-matrix calculations are also provided to describe 180 elastic (resonant and non-resonant) electron scattering from the B4 ions [11]. Finally, NTE calculations within a standard semi-classical impact parameter atomic orbital closecoupling method (AOCC) are also presented to assess the strength of the NTEA process. ] 1 2 1 2 V vzVp v EI i 2 p 2 z N with f ree f ree J vzi vzi ∑ Vpi i vzi «ª 2 E EI Vp (3) obtained by solving Eq. 1 for vz . The Compton profile, Ji vzi , gives the probability of finding the target electron in the i-th subshell with a velocity component vzi . The index i in Eq. 2 runs over all target electron subshells satisfying the basic IA assumption, i.e. Vp ¬¬ vti , which at Vp 3 8 a.u. (3.92 MeV) includes only the Ar 3s and 3p electrons [15]. Calculated Hartree-Fock Compton profiles are available in the literature [23], while for H2 and He targets, analytic expressions have been fitted to high energy electron scattering measurements [24, 20]. In Fig. 1 we compare the Compton profiles of H2 , He and Ar 3s 3p . H2 is seen to have the narrowest profile, while He and Ar 3s 3p are comparable in width. The theoretical elastic electron scattering SDCS, d σ E ® θ i¯ dΩ, was obtained using an R-matrix method. First, a basis set of orbitals nl ±° 1s ® 2s ® 2p ® 3s ® 3p ® 3d ² was determined from Hartree-Fock calculations [25] for the 1snl configurations for B4 . Then all nln l (n ® nl 2 ® 3) configurations were used to describe the 11 lowest states of B3 . A basis of 40 additional orbitals was coupled to these configurations to represent the resonance or continuum wavefunctions. With this atomic structure, the R-matrix suite of codes [26, 27] was utilized to compute scattering transition matrices Ti³ f E . For the present investigation, a new code, based closely on the work of Griffin and Pindzola [28], was developed to compute the differential cross section at each energy E from Eq. 4 in Ref. [28]. Since that expression involves cross-terms between lower and higher partial wave symmetries L, we found it necessary to include more partial (1) i "! #$ %"& ')( *,+ -/. 021 3/4 576)8 9;:)< =?>)@ A;B/C DFEHG IKJHL M ¡s¢¤£ ¥W¦ §q¨ © i components of v perpendicular to V p Vp ẑ, which are assumed to be much smaller than Vp , are neglected [14]. The free electron-ion scattering SDCS is then related to the quasi-free electron-ion scattering DDCS by d σ E θ dΩ SUTWVYXZ []\_^a` bdc e f gih jlknm oqpsrqtvuxw yaz|{ }~W ii sW d FIGURE 1. Compton profiles Ji vz for H2 , He and Ar normalized at the Ar Compton profile maximum for comparison. In the case of Ar only contributions of 3s 3p electrons are included. The normalization factors are shown in parenthesis. EI is the i-th target subshell ionization potential. The d 2 σ E θ dΩ dE quasi O In the ESM, the bound target electron, as seen from the rest frame of the ion, is considered to interact as a free electron, with its velocity distribution given by its Compton profile J vz [1]. Thus, the velocity of the impinging quasi-free electron V , is related to the ion velocity V p by the frame transformation, V V p v. The velocity v of the electron due to its bound motion around the target atom and E, its kinetic energy in the ion rest frame, are related (in a.u.) by [14] 1 V p v 2 EI i 2 P ESM AND R-MATRIX CALCULATION E Q (2) 37 ç öø÷ ÿ NTE CALCULATIONS The SDCS for NTEA at zero-degree observation can be calculated from the expression [7]: ih 2L 1 4π σNT E E p ® ML 0 ξ 0 mexc 2π ¶ Pcmc b E p Pexc b E p δ mc ab ´ > Z[ XY = mexc · 0 bdb (5) < ¿ÁÀÂÃJÄ Å ÆÈÇÉÁÊÌËJÍ < ýþ ûü ¦§ ¤¥ ¢¡ £ ÿ !"#$%&'( )*,+-.0/124365798:<; ¨ª© «¬¯®±°³²µ´·¶¹¸»º0¼¾½ ÎpÏÐ Ñ ÒÈÓ ÔÖÕ× Ø Ù ÚÜÛ ÝÞ ß à á â ãÈä åÖæç è é êÜë ìí î ïÈð ñÖòó ô õ öÜ÷ øù ú jk6lmnporqs6tu v6wrx yz{ |}~ 6r 96 64 !#"%$'&)(+*,.- FIGURE 2. Zero-degree electron spectra for collisions of 3.92 MeV B4 with H2 , He and Ar targets in the range of 184204 eV in the ion rest-frame. Also shown are the theoretical DDCS which were computed using the R-matrix SDCS calculation and the Compton profiles Ji as given by Eq. 2. Z2 Z3 r µ e ¹ Z4 r r was used to represent the B4 ion and the He and Ar targets. Two separate calculations are performed for the capture and excitation processes. The parameters Zi for capture are fitted so that the binding energies of the quasi one electron are close to the experimental values. However, for the Ar/He-B4 excitation process, we fitted the potential parameters Zi for Ar and He to the static potential, using the electron densities calculated from analytic Hatree-Fock-Slater wave functions made up of normalized one-electron orbitals [30]. The purpose of this is to ensure that, in the separated atom limit, the excited ion B4 only sees a neutral Ar or He atom. Therefore capture and excitation were represented by different sets of parameters ° Zi ² . Calculated NTEA SDCS (Eqs. 4-5) are shown in Fig. 3. For 4 MeV collisions of B4 with H2 and He (screened),NTEA is negligible contributing with less than 1 º 10 » 20 cm2 ¯ sr. Howr ? \] VW BDC6E F GDHJILK6MONQP R SUT @ _` ^ mexc ® where Pcmc b ® E p and Pexc b E p are the capture and excitation probabilities, respectively, with magnetic quantum numbers mc mexc ML 0. For Vp ¬¬ 1 0 a.u., it is legitimate to employ the one electron model in our calculation. Briefly, in this model, the time-dependent wave function of the active electron is expanded in terms of traveling atomic orbitals placed at both centers. The transition amplitudes to particular nlm states were obtained by solving the time-dependent coupled differential equations for each impact parameter and energy. A quasi one-electron pseudo-potential of the form V r ¸ Z1 ¼/½d¾À¿/Ái«Ã/ÄdÅÀÆ/ÇiÈ«É/ÊdËÍÌ)ÎdÏÀÐ/ÑiÒ«Ó/ÔiÕ×ÖqØiÙÛÚqÜdÝ×Þqßsà A c de where L and ML are the total angular momentum and magnetic quantum number, respectively, of the intermediate doubly-excited state (e.g. L 2 for the 2p2 1D state) and ξ is the Auger yield for the particular decay channel. The factor ´ 2L4π 1 µ σNT E E p ® ML 0 accounts for the electron emission at zero-degrees. The state-selective NTE cross section, σNT E E p ® ML 0 , can be calculated from a standard semi-classical impact parameter atomic orbital close-coupling method (AOCC) [29] σNT E E p ML áâ fg (4) ìlíïî_ðvñnòôó õ åæ ãä ûüý þ ùú d σ E p ® 0 ] dΩ èlévê ë waves than are needed to converge the total cross section (which does not involve cross-terms); partial waves up to L 9 were used. A final convolution with the analyzer’s response function to account for the 0.5 eV resolution enabled a direct comparison to the data using Eq. 2 as seen in Fig. 2. ever, for He (unscreened) and Ar targets, NTEA is / 10 times stronger and could be important. In Fig. 2 we present our zero-degree electron spectra for 3.92 MeV B4 collisions with H2 , He and Ar targets in the range of 184-204 eV in the ion rest-frame. The ZAPS [16] apparatus has been already described [31] and is not presented here. Single collision conditions were verified for the pressures used, i.e. 20 mTorr for H2 /He and 5 mTorr for Ar, respectively. The strong line around 193.5 eV is due to the 2p2 1D resonance, which cannot be resolved from the lower intensity 2s2p 1P line at 194.2 eV. Other observed lines are the 2s2 1S at 186.2 eV and 2s2p 3P at 187.5 eV. In the case of He and Ar these lines are stronger due to NTEA. 38 ~ z { |}y C+DFE @BA m nop fgh 3. 0 1 4. JLK PRQTSVUXWY[Z \^] _'` acb de ;=< > 576 8:9 2. MON σ kl ij [V ¡ ¢£ ¤'¥¦¨§V©[ª=«:¬ V®¯:°V±V² ³c´¶µ¨·¹¸[º=»[¼ ½¹¾¿[ÀVÁ¹Â ÃcĶŠÆ=Ç:È ÉVÊË:ÌVÍVÎ ÏÐRÑ Ò=Ó[Ô ÕVÖ×[ØVÙ¹Ú ? Ω uvxt w qrs I 7T[ 5. 6. GIH 2 !: V.V 3 4 7. 8. FIGURE 3. Lines: NTEA SDCS model AOCC calculations for the production of zero-degree electrons from the 2s2p 1P and 2p2 1D states in B4 collisions with H2 ( Û 2H), He and Ar (3s+3p electrons only). NTEA with the excitation due to either a screened or an unscreened He nucleus are compared. Data: measured SDCS from Fig. 2. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. It is important to realize that the same single R-matrix SDCS is multiplied in each case by the appropriate Compton profile as indicated in Eq. 2. Only R-matrix results are included in Fig. 2 and thus any deviations in the agreement of the R-matrix results with experiment should be attributable to NTE. In Fig. 2, we note that for all three targets, the non-resonant (BEe continuum) part of the spectrum is very well reproduced. In the case of H2 and He, the resonant part is also in excellent agreement with the calculation, indicating practically no NTEA. However, in the case of Ar 3s and 3p contributions, the resonant ESM result is seen to be larger than experiment even though the non-resonant part is well reproduced. This discrepancy is even more puzzling in as much as any NTEA contribution incoherently added to the R-matrix results, would make the discrepancy for Ar even larger. 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