Effect of positron-atom interactions on the annihilation gamma spectra of molecules
D. G. Green, S. Saha, F. Wang, G. F. Gribakin, C. M. Surko

TL;DR
This study investigates how positron-atom interactions influence the gamma spectra resulting from positron annihilation in molecules, highlighting the importance of nuclear repulsion and correlation effects for accurate spectral predictions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a computational approach that incorporates nuclear repulsion and correlation effects to improve the accuracy of gamma spectrum predictions for molecular positron annihilation.
Findings
Positron spectra are about 40% broader than experimental data when using simple models.
Nuclear repulsion causes suppression of high-momentum electron contributions.
Including correction factors aligns theoretical spectra more closely with experimental results.
Abstract
Calculations of gamma spectra for positron annihilation on a selection of molecules, including methane and its fluoro-substitutes, ethane, propane, butane and benzene are presented. The annihilation gamma spectra characterise the momentum distribution of the electron-positron pair at the instant of annihilation. The contribution to the gamma spectra from individual molecular orbitals is obtained from electron momentum densities calculated using modern computational quantum chemistry density functional theory tools. The calculation, in its simplest form, effectively treats the low-energy (thermalised, room-temperature) positron as a plane wave and gives annihilation gamma spectra that are about 40% broader than experiment, although the main chemical trends are reproduced. We show that this effective "narrowing" of the experimental spectra is due to the action of the molecular potential…
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