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In [[particle physics]], a '''shower''' is a cascade of secondary [[subatomic particle|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.
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== Types of showers ==
[[Image:Schematic of a particle shower.svg|thumb|right|The start of an electromagnetic shower.]]
There are two basic types of showers.  ''Electromagnetic showers'' are produced by a particle that interacts primarily or exclusively via the [[electromagnetic force]], usually a [[photon]] or [[electron]].  ''Hadronic showers'' are produced by [[hadron]]s (i.e. [[nucleon]]s and other particles made of [[quark]]s), and proceed mostly via the [[strong nuclear force]].
 
===Electromagnetic showers===
An electromagnetic shower begins when a high-energy electron, positron or photon enters a material. At high energies (above a few [[Electron volt|MeV]], below which [[photoelectric effect]] and [[Compton scattering]] are dominant), photons interact with matter primarily via [[pair production]] &mdash; that is, they convert into an electron-[[positron]] pair, interacting with an [[atomic nucleus]] or electron in order to conserve [[momentum]].  High-energy electrons and positrons primarily emit photons, a process called [[bremsstrahlung]]. These two processes (pair production and bremsstrahlung) continues until photons fall below the pair production threshold, and energy losses of electrons other than bremsstrahlung start to dominate.
The characteristic amount of matter traversed for these related interactions is called the radiation length <math>X_0</math>. Which is both the mean distance over which a high-energy electron loses all but 1/e  of its energy by bremsstrahlung and 7/9  of the mean free path for pair production by a high energy photon. The length of the cascade scales with  <math>X_0</math> ; the "shower depth" is approximately determined by the relation
:<math>X = X_0 \frac{\ln(E_0/E_c)}{\ln2},</math>
where <math>X_0</math> is the [[radiation length]] of the matter, and <math>E_c</math> is the [[critical energy]]. The shower depth increases logarithmically with the energy. While the lateral spread of the shower is mainly due to the multiple scattering of the electrons. Up to the shower maximum the shower is contained  in a cylinder with radius < 1 radiation length. Beyond that point electrons are increasingly affected  by multiple scattering, and the lateral sized scales with Moliere  radius <math>R_M</math>. The propagation of the photons in the shower causes deviations from Moliere radius scaling. However, roughly  95% of the shower is contained laterally in a cylinder with radius <math>2R_M</math>.
 
The mean longitudinal profile of the energy deposition in electromagnetic cascades is reasonably well described by a gamma distribution:
 
:<math>\frac{dE}{dt} = E_0b  \frac{bt^{a-1}e^{-bt}}{\Gamma(a)}</math>
 
where <math>t=X/X_{0}</math>, <math>E_0</math>  is the initial energy and  <math>a</math> and  <math>b</math> are parameters to be fitted with Monte Carlo or experimental data.
 
===Hadronic showers===
 
The physical process that cause the propagation of a hadron shower are considerably different from the processes in electromagnetic showers. About half of the incident hadron energy is passed on to additional secondaries. The remainder is consumed  in multiparticle production  of slow pions and in other processes. The phenomena which determine the development of the hadronic showers are: hadron production, nuclear deexcitation and pion and muon decays. Neutral pions  amount, on average to 1/3 of the produced pions and their energy is dissipated in the form of electromagnetic showers. Another important characteristic  of the hadronic shower  is that it takes longer to develop than the electromagnetic one. This can be seen by comparing the number of particles  present versus depth for pion  and electron initiated showers. The longitudinal development of hadronic showers scales with the nuclear absorption (or interaction length)
 
:<math>\lambda=\frac{A}{N_A \sigma_{abs}}</math>
 
The lateral shower development does not scale with λ.
 
== 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 shower (physics)|air showers]] that the first [[muon]]s and [[pion]]s were detected experimentally, and they are used today by a number of experiments as a means of observing [[ultra-high-energy cosmic ray]]s.  Some experiments, like [[Fly's Eye]], have observed the visible atmospheric [[fluorescence]] produced at the peak intensity of the shower; others, like [[Haverah 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-energy [[particle accelerator]]s, a device called a [[calorimeter (particle physics)|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 and [[electromagnetic radiation]] produced in the [[Earth's atmosphere|atmosphere]] when a ''primary'' [[cosmic ray]] (i.e. one of extraterrestrial origin) enters our atmosphere.
* [[MAGIC (telescope)|MAGIC Cherenkov Telescope]]
* [[Pierre Auger Observatory]]
* [[ATLAS experiment#Calorimeters|ATLAS experiment calorimeters]]
* CMS experiment, [[Compact_Muon_Solenoid#Layer_2_.E2.80.93_The_Electromagnetic_Calorimeter|electromagnetic]] and [[Compact_Muon_Solenoid#Layer_3_.E2.80.93_The_Hadronic_Calorimeter|hadronic]] calorimeters
* [[Collision cascade]], a set of collisions between atoms in a solid
 
==References==
* [http://pdg.lbl.gov/2005/reviews/passagerpp.pdf "Passage of particles through matter"], from {{cite journal | author=S. Eidelman et al. | title=Review of Particle Physics | journal=Physics Letters B | year=2004 | volume=592 | pages=1 | doi=10.1016/j.physletb.2004.06.001|arxiv = astro-ph/0406663 |bibcode = 2004PhLB..592....1P | url=http://pdg.lbl.gov}}
 
[[Category:Experimental particle physics]]

Latest revision as of 11:57, 13 November 2014

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