Coherent $Ï^0$ photoproduction in bulk matter at high energies
arXiv:0901.1161 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.062504
Abstract
The momentum transfer $Îk$ required for a photon to scatter from a target and emerge as a $Ï^0$ decreases as the photon energy $k$ rises. For $k>3\times10^{14}$ eV, $Îk$ is small enough that the interaction cannot be localized to a single nucleus. At still higher energies, photons may coherently scatter elastically from bulk matter and emerge as a $Ï^0$, in a manner akin to kaon regeneration. Constructive interference from the different nuclei coherently raises the cross section and the interaction probability rises linearly with energy. At energies above $10^{23}$ eV, coherent conversion is the dominant process; photons interact predominantly as $Ï^0$. We compute the coherent scattering probabilities in slabs of lead, water and rock, and discuss the implications of the increased hadronic interaction probabilities for photons on ultra-high energy shower development.
4 pgs. with 4 figures