Raman scattering cross sections depend on photon polarization. In the
cuprates nodal and antinodal directions are weighted more strongly in B2g
and B1g symmetry, respectively. On the other hand in angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES), electronic properties are measured along
well-defined directions in momentum space rather than their weighted averages.
In contrast, the optical conductivity involves a momentum average over the
entire Brillouin zone. Newly measured Raman response data on high-quality
Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ single crystals up to high energies have
been inverted using a modified maximum entropy inversion technique to extract
from B1g and B2g Raman data corresponding electron-boson spectral
densities (glue) are compared to the results obtained with known ARPES and
optical inversions. We find that the B2g spectrum agrees qualitatively
with nodal direction ARPES while the B1g looks more like the optical
spectrum. A large peak around 30−40meV in B1g, much less prominent
in B2g, is taken as support for the importance of (π,π) scattering
at this frequency.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure