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  4. What happens when 2 electrons collide?
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What happens when 2 electrons collide?

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Offline lightarrow

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What happens when 2 electrons collide?
« Reply #20 on: 06/06/2010 13:33:38 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 06/06/2010 10:28:13
Quote from: lightarrow on 30/05/2010 21:26:50
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/05/2010 19:19:50

Since each photon only has an energy equivalent to the mass of one electron it can't undergo pair production- there's nothing with a mass of half an electron that it could form a pair of.
A photon can have any energy you want, photons in the visible range have energy around 1 eV, an electron's mass is 511*103 eV/c2...

In general photons can have any energy you want.
In the case of photons produced by pair production from electron + positron annihilation they have an energy of 511KeV. Unless the particles had a lot of energy to begin with, the photon energies produced will not be big enough to produce a particle by pair production beccause there isn't a particle with a mass of about 255 KeV.
Ok, I thought you answered to the OP's question about why two photons and not one only are generated in the e+ e- annihilation.
Quote
BTW, does anyone know why SLAC would be colliding massless changeless particles like photons?
Photon-photon collisions are studied since the 70', i imagine it's just for research, as every other kind of research, why your question?
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