The Frank–Tamm formula yields the amount of Cherenkov radiation emitted on a given frequency as a charged particle moves through a medium at superluminal velocity. It is named for Russian physicists Ilya Frank and Igor Tamm who developed the theory of the Cherenkov effect in 1937, for which they were awarded a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1958.
When a charged particle moves faster than the phase speed of light in a medium, electrons interacting with the particle can emit coherent photons while conserving energy and momentum. This process can be viewed as a decay. See Cherenkov radiation and nonradiation condition for an explanation of this effect.
Equation
editThe energy emitted per unit length travelled by the particle per unit of frequency is: provided that . Here and are the frequency-dependent permeability and index of refraction of the medium respectively, is the electric charge of the particle, is the speed of the particle, and is the speed of light in vacuum.
Cherenkov radiation does not have characteristic spectral peaks, as typical for fluorescence or emission spectra. The relative intensity of one frequency is approximately proportional to the frequency. That is, higher frequencies (shorter wavelengths) are more intense in Cherenkov radiation. This is why visible Cherenkov radiation is observed to be brilliant blue. In fact, most Cherenkov radiation is in the ultraviolet spectrum; the sensitivity of the human eye peaks at green, and is very low in the violet portion of the spectrum.
The total amount of energy radiated per unit length is:
This integral is done over the frequencies for which the particle's speed is greater than speed of light of the media . The integral is convergent (finite) because at high frequencies the refractive index becomes less than unity and for extremely high frequencies it becomes unity.[note 1][note 2]
Derivation of Frank–Tamm formula
editConsider a charged particle moving relativistically along -axis in a medium with refraction index [note 3] with a constant velocity . Start with Maxwell's equations (in Gaussian units) in the wave forms (also known as the Lorenz gauge condition) and take the Fourier transform:
For a charge of magnitude (where is the elementary charge) moving with velocity , the density and charge density can be expressed as and , taking the Fourier transform [note 4] gives:
Substituting this density and charge current into the wave equation, we can solve for the Fourier-form potentials: and
Using the definition of the electromagnetic fields in terms of potentials, we then have the Fourier-form of the electric and magnetic field: and
To find the radiated energy, we consider electric field as a function of frequency at some perpendicular distance from the particle trajectory, say, at , where is the impact parameter. It is given by the inverse Fourier transform:
First we compute -component of the electric field (parallel to ):
For brevity we define . Breaking the integral apart into , the integral can immediately be integrated by the definition of the Dirac Delta:
The integral over has the value , giving:
The last integral over is in the form of a modified (Macdonald) Bessel function, giving the evaluated parallel component in the form:
One can follow a similar pattern of calculation for the other fields components arriving at:
- and
We can now consider the radiated energy per particle traversed distance . It can be expressed through the electromagnetic energy flow through the surface of an infinite cylinder of radius around the path of the moving particle, which is given by the integral of the Poynting vector over the cylinder surface:
The integral over at one instant of time is equal to the integral at one point over all time. Using :
Converting this to the frequency domain:
To go into the domain of Cherenkov radiation, we now consider perpendicular distance much greater than atomic distances in a medium, that is, . With this assumption we can expand the Bessel functions into their asymptotic form:
- and
Thus:
If has a positive real part (usually true), the exponential will cause the expression to vanish rapidly at large distances, meaning all the energy is deposited near the path. However, this isn't true when is purely imaginary – this instead causes the exponential to become 1 and then is independent of , meaning some of the energy escapes to infinity as radiation – this is Cherenkov radiation.
is purely imaginary if is real and . That is, when is real, Cherenkov radiation has the condition that . This is the statement that the speed of the particle must be larger than the phase velocity of electromagnetic fields in the medium at frequency in order to have Cherenkov radiation. With this purely imaginary condition, and the integral can be simplified to:
This is the Frank–Tamm equation in Gaussian units.[1]
Notes
edit- ^ The refractive index n is defined as the ratio of the speed of electromagnetic radiation in vacuum and the phase speed of electromagnetic waves in a medium and can, under specific circumstances, become less than one. See refractive index for further information.
- ^ The refractive index can become less than unity near the resonance frequency but at extremely high frequencies the refractive index becomes unity.
- ^ For simplicity we consider magnetic permeability .
- ^ We use engineering notation for the Fourier transform, where factors appear both in direct and inverse transforms.
References
edit- ^ Jackson, John (1999). Classical Electrodynamics. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 646–654. ISBN 978-0-471-30932-1.
- Mead, C. A. (1958). "Quantum Theory of the Refractive Index". Physical Review. 110 (2): 359. Bibcode:1958PhRv..110..359M. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.110.359.
- Cerenkov, P.A. (1937). "Visible Radiation Produced by Electrons Moving in a Medium with Velocities Exceeding that of Light". Physical Review. 52 (4): 378. Bibcode:1937PhRv...52..378C. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.52.378.