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Electron transfer, ionization, and excitation in atomic collisions. Progress report, June 15, 1992--June 14, 1995
Author(s) -
Thomas G. Winter,
Steven Alston
Publication year - 1995
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/96847
Subject(s) - atomic physics , ionization , electron , ion , physics , excitation , collision , perturbation theory (quantum mechanics) , projectile , electron capture , nuclear physics , quantum mechanics , computer security , computer science
The research program of Winter and Alston addresses the fundamental processes of electron transfer, ionization, and excitation in ion-atom, ion-ion, and ion-molecule collisions. Attention is focussed on one- and two-electron systems and, more recently, quasi-one-electron systems whose electron-target-core interaction can be accurately modeled by one-electron potentials. The basic computational approaches can then be taken with few, if any, approximations, and the underlying collisional mechanisms can be more clearly revealed. Winter has focussed on intermediate collision energies (e.g., proton energies for p-He{sup +} collisions on the order of 100 kilo-electron volts), in which many electron states are strongly coupled during the collision and a coupled-state approach, such as a coupled-Sturmian-pseudostate approach, is appropriate. Alston has concentrated on higher collision energies (million electron-volt energies), or asymmetric collision systems, for which the coupling of the projectile is weaker with, however, many more target states being coupled together so that high-order perturbation theory is essential. Several calculations by Winter and Alston are described, as set forth in the original proposal

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