MODERN BYU 13

Physics Solution – Q13

Solution: Nucleus Velocity for Resonant Absorption

1. Concept

When a nucleus emits a gamma photon, it recoils to conserve momentum. This recoil takes away a small amount of energy, so the photon energy $E_\gamma$ is slightly less than the transition energy $\Delta E$.

Similarly, for another nucleus to absorb a photon, the incident photon must provide the transition energy $\Delta E$ plus the kinetic energy required for the absorbing nucleus to recoil. Because of this “double recoil” loss (once at emission, once at absorption), a stationary nucleus cannot absorb a photon emitted by another stationary nucleus.

To compensate, the absorbing nucleus must move towards the source so that the Doppler effect increases the photon’s apparent energy.

Emitter (Fixed) Sn Photon Absorber Sn v

2. Energy Conservation & Recoil

Let $\Delta E$ be the transition energy. Let $R$ be the recoil energy of the nucleus.

At Emission:
$E_\gamma = \Delta E – R$

At Absorption:
The photon needs energy $E’_{req} = \Delta E + R$ (in the absorber’s frame) to excite the nucleus and provide recoil.

The energy gap to be bridged is roughly $2R$. The absorbing nucleus moves with velocity $v$ towards the source, creating a Doppler shift.

Using the Doppler shift formula for $v \ll c$:

$$E’_{absorbed} = E_\gamma \left( 1 + \frac{v}{c} \right)$$ $$(\Delta E – R)\left( 1 + \frac{v}{c} \right) = \Delta E + R$$

Expanding and ignoring the small term $R \frac{v}{c}$:

$$\Delta E + \Delta E \frac{v}{c} – R \approx \Delta E + R$$ $$\Delta E \frac{v}{c} \approx 2R$$

3. Calculating Velocity

Recoil energy $R$ is given by momentum conservation ($p_{nucleus} = p_{\gamma} = E/c$):

$$R = \frac{p^2}{2M} = \frac{E_\gamma^2}{2Mc^2}$$

Substitute $2R$ into the Doppler equation:

$$\Delta E \frac{v}{c} = 2 \left( \frac{E_\gamma^2}{2Mc^2} \right)$$

Approximating $\Delta E \approx E_\gamma$:

$$E_\gamma \frac{v}{c} = \frac{E_\gamma^2}{Mc^2}$$ $$v = \frac{E_\gamma}{Mc}$$

Numerical Calculation:

  • $E_\gamma = 22.6 \text{ keV} = 22.6 \times 10^3 \text{ eV}$
  • $Mc^2 = 113 \text{ GeV} = 113 \times 10^9 \text{ eV}$
  • $c = 3 \times 10^8 \text{ m/s}$
$$v = c \cdot \frac{E_\gamma}{Mc^2} = (3 \times 10^8) \cdot \frac{22.6 \times 10^3}{113 \times 10^9}$$ $$v = (3 \times 10^8) \cdot (0.2 \times 10^{-6}) = 0.6 \times 10^2 = 60 \text{ m/s}$$
Answer: The velocity of the moving nucleus is approx $60 \text{ m/s}$.