- Particle shower
In
particle physics , a shower is a cascade of secondary particles produced as the result of a high-energy particle interacting with dense matter. The incoming particle interacts, producing multiple new particles with lesser energy; each of these then interacts in the same way, a process that continues until many thousands, millions, or even billions of low-energy particles are produced. These are then stopped in the matter and absorbed.Types of showers
There are two basic types of showers. "Electromagnetic showers" are produced by a particle that interacts primarily or exclusively via the
electromagnetic force , usually aphoton orelectron . "Hadronic showers" are produced byhadron s (i.e.nucleon s and other particles made ofquark s), and proceed mostly via thestrong nuclear force .An electromagnetic shower begins when a high-energy electron or photon enters a material. At high energy, photons interact with matter primarily via
pair production —that is, they convert into an electron-positron pair, interacting with anatomic nucleus or electron in order to conservemomentum . High-energy electrons and positrons primarily emit photons, a process calledbremsstrahlung . These two processes continue in turn, until the remaining particles have lower energy. Electrons and photons then lose energy via scattering until they are absorbed by atoms.A hadronic shower is produced by a high-energy hadron such as a
nucleon ,pion , or atomic nucleus. Some such particles haveelectric charge , and so produce showers that are partially electromagnetic, but all also interact with nuclei via the strong force. Although the details are more complex for this force, such an interaction involves one hadron interacting with a nucleus and producing several lower-energy hadrons. This continues, as with the electromagnetic shower, until all particles are stopped or absorbed in the material.Examples of showers
Cosmic ray s hit earth's atmosphere on a regular basis, and they produce showers as they proceed through the atmosphere. It was from these air showers that the firstmuon s andpion s were detected experimentally, and they are used today by a number of experiments as a means of observingultra-high-energy cosmic ray s. Some experiments, likeFly's Eye , have observed the visible atmosphericfluorescence produced at the peak intensity of the shower; others, likeHaverah Park experiment , have detected the remains of a shower by sampling the energy deposited over a large area on the ground.In
particle detector s built at high-energyparticle accelerator s, a device called a calorimeter records the energy of particles by causing them to produce a shower and then measuring the energy deposited as a result. Many large modern detectors have both an "electromagnetic calorimeter" and a "hadronic calorimeter", with each designed specially to produce that particular kind of shower and measure the energy of the associated type of particle.See also
*
Air shower (physics) , an extensive (many kilometres wide) cascade of ionized particles andelectromagnetic radiation produced in the atmosphere when a "primary"cosmic ray (i.e. one of extraterrestrial origin) enters our atmosphere.
* MAGIC Cherenkov Telescope
*Pierre Auger Observatory
* ATLAS experiment calorimetersReferences
* [http://pdg.lbl.gov/2005/reviews/passagerpp.pdf "Passage of particles through matter"] , from cite journal | author=S. Eidelman et al. | title= [http://pdg.lbl.gov Review of Particle Physics] | journal=Physics Letters B | year=2004 | volume=592 | pages=1 | doi=10.1016/j.physletb.2004.06.001
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