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The processes of electron-positron annihilation into photon pairs and
of pair creation by photons are of interest both theoretically
and experimentally.
Electron-positron annihilation takes places with
high rates at colliders such as LEP, SLC and TRISTAN. It is
therefore important to account for this reaction correctly in order
to carry out reliable analyses of experimental data.
Moreover this is also important for the development of new, higher
energy electron-positron colliders and for the planning of
new experiments because this process is a large source of background.
Theoretically the process is well understood ever since it was first
calculated by P.A.M. Dirac in 1930. We shall see later
that the study of
annihilation into photons is also a first
step towards the understanding of a similar process, the
annihilation of quark-antiquark pairs into gluons, which has acquired
importance in elementary particle physics in recent years.
When you enter the annihilation process in the CompHEP session you will see that only one Feynman diagram is generated (Fig. 4). This should come as some surprise since you probably know that by crossing you should expect each of the two Compton diagrams to give rise to one Feynman diagram for the annihilation process (see, for instance, [2] Section 7.8, [1] Section 6.15). The reason for this is simple: the two diagrams which you expect have only different 4-momenta and polarization vectors attached to the final state photons, topologically however they are identical. The single diagram displayed by CompHEP is therefore equivalent to two diagrams with labelled external lines. When you let CompHEP carry out the squaring of the amplitude and then inspect the squared diagrams, you will see that there are two squared diagrams and not three. One of these represents the two topologically identical diagrams with different photon momenta and polarizations, the second one is the expected interference term.
Now carry out the analytical calculations of the squared matrix element applying the familiar procedure of invoking option Symbolic calculations. We can explore the annihilation process by performing a numerical experiment using the option Numerical calculator.
Let us begin by choosing a CMS energy of 64 GeV, characteristic for the
electron-positron collider TRISTAN. The total cross section will be
displayed as
. Assuming the nominal luminosity of TRISTAN,
, such a cross section means the
production of one photon pair every 40 seconds. This is a high rate,
more than an order of magnitude greater than for any other annihilation
process at this energy. Therefore the two-photon annihilation
could turn out to be a very intensive source of background for other
physical processes. However let us look at the photon angular
distribution using option Angular dependence. You will see the
curve reproduced here in Fig. 5. The main feature of this
distribution is the forward/backward symmetry which is always observed
when there are two identical particles in the final state. Furthermore
we note a very strong peaking at
and
.
Experimentally this implies that most of the photons escape in the beam pipe.
To get a more quantitative picture about the narrow peaks at the edges
let us store the results in the form of a table using option
Save result in a file and then view the table with
the help of function key F5. The differential cross section equals
at
and drops
by nine orders of magnitude between
and
, and stays flat between
and
. Next let us cut out a typical pair of cones around
the beam pipe, where particles remain undetected (see section
), using option Set angular range:
f-angle between in - e1 and out - A cos(f): min = -0.996200 max = 0.996200
This corresponds to an angular cut of
. As a result the total cross section is reduced to
. This means that about 80% of the photons escape
undetected in the beam pipe or, conversely, that the number of photons
actually seen in the detector is significantly less than the total number
of photons produced by annihilation. Nevertheless this rate is still large
and such events can be a significant background to other reactions.
Let us calculate now the energy dependence of the total cross section for
three cases: for the whole angular range and for the angular intervals
(
)
and
(
).
To get the corresponding plots use the menu Parameter dependence
and select the options Total Cross Section and Energy.
The package will prompt you for the
energy range you want to examine, for the scale (logarithmic or
linear) and for the number of points (21 by default). Let us choose
the following values:
Parameter : Energy min 10 max 100 Scale norm Number of points 21
As soon as these parameters are entered, the numerical calculation
is done automatically. When the calculation is completed you can
inspect the results using options Show plot and
Save result in a file. The latter option produces tables in the
form of files with the names tab_N.txt, where
. Here in Fig. 6 we have
combined the three curves in one plot.
From these curves we infer that the
total cross section has the smooth behaviour characteristic of
collisions of structureless
particles. The drop with energy is independent of the angular range.
Presently we shall see that it is close to a
law.
To get the analytical answer for the squared matrix element you must repeat
all steps which we have made in the case of Compton scattering for both of
the squared amplitudes and then add the results to get the final expression:
You can check that the squared matrix elements have the same functional
form in the two cases of Compton scattering and of the annihilation
process. To get one formula from the other one has to exchange the two
Mandelstam variables, and
and take account of some additional
factors. One of these is connected with the Fermi statistics of
electrons and positrons. As there is one fermion in the final state of
Compton scattering and there are no fermions in the case of annihilation,
those two matrix elements have opposite signs (see section
).
There is furthermore a factor of
which arises in the annihilation
channel because of the presence of two identical particles, the two photons,
in the final state (see section
).
Such very strong similarity between the matrix elements of the processes
under consideration is based on the fact that the same set of Feynman
diagrams contribute. This is a consequence of a fundamental property
called crossing symmetry.3In the case of
processes we can say that crossing symmetry
relates the process
to the process
, where
and
denote the antiparticles of
and
.
These processes are represented by the same set of Feynman diagrams.
However you have to remember that in CompHEP Feynman diagrams are
constructed
without permutation over final identical particles (this operation is
performed in later steps of the calculation).
The differential cross section of annihilation is given by
It remains to integrate the differential cross section at fixed energy
over the kinematical range of ,
At high energies,
, this simplifies to the asymptotic
formula
Finally consider the third reaction which is related by crossing symmetry
to Compton scattering and to electron-positron annihilation, i.e
the creation of electron-positron pairs in collisions,
. This is the process reversed in time with respect
to the annihilation reaction. There are two Feynman diagrams representing
the scattering amplitude. According to crossing
symmetry the squared matrix element has the same dependence on the
kinematical variables as the squared matrix element of the annihilation
process but it is twice as large because of the absence of
the combinatorial factor of
that was needed in the case of annihilation to account for the two
identical particles in the final state. We leave it to the reader
to verify this statement by doing the next problem.