Available energy (particle collision)
In particle physics, the available energy is the energy in a particle collision available to produce new matter from the kinetic energy of the colliding particles. Since the conservation of momentum must be held, a system of two particles with a net momentum may not convert all their kinetic energy into mass - and thus the available energy is always less than or equal to the kinetic energy of the colliding particles. The available energy for a system of one stationary particle and one moving particle is defined as:
where
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is the total energy of the target particle,
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is the total energy of the moving particle,
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is the mass of the stationary target particle,
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is the mass of the moving particle, and
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is the speed of light.
Derivation
This derivation will use the fact that:
From the principle of the conservation of linear momentum:
Where and
are the momentums of the created and the initially moving particle respectively.
From the conservation of energy:
Where is the total energy of the created particle.
We know that after the collision:
Donating this last equation (1). But
and since the stationary particle has no momentum
Therefore from (1) we have
Square rooting both sides and we get