9 research outputs found
The yield of air fluorescence induced by electrons
The fluorescence yield for dry air and pure nitrogen excited by electrons is
calculated using a combination of well-established molecular properties and
experimental data of the involved cross sections. Particular attention has been
paid to the role of secondary electrons from ionization processes. At high
pressure and high energy, observed fluorescence turns out to be proportional to
the ionization cross section which follows the Born-Bethe law. Predictions on
fluorescence yields in a very wide interval of electron energies (eV - GeV) and
pressures (1 and 1013 hPa) as expected from laboratory measurements are
presented. Experimental results at energies over 1 MeV are in very good
agreement with our calculations for pure nitrogen while discrepancies of about
20% are found for dry air, very likely associated to uncertainties in the
available data on quenching cross sections. The relationship between
fluorescence emission, stopping power and deposited energy is discussed.Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures, 64 references. Accepted in Astroparticle
Physic