Independent-atom-model coupled-channel calculations strengthen the case for interatomic Coulomb decay as a subdominant reaction channel in slow O$^{3+}$-Ne$_2$ collisions
Dyuman Bhattacharya, Tom Kirchner

TL;DR
This study uses independent-atom-model coupled-channel calculations to analyze electron removal in slow O$^{3+}$-Ne$_2$ collisions, highlighting interatomic Coulomb decay as a minor reaction pathway supported by experimental data.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled-channel approach with orientation averaging to better understand electron removal processes in ion-dimer collisions, emphasizing interatomic Coulomb decay.
Findings
Agreement with experimental data for O$^{3+}$-Ne$_2$ with screened potential
Disagreement with data for Li$^{3+}$ with bare Coulomb potential
Interatomic Coulomb decay is a subdominant reaction channel
Abstract
We report on electron removal calculations for 2.81 keV/amu Li and O ion collisions with neon dimers. The target is described as two independent neon atoms fixed at the dimer's equilibrium bond length, whose electrons are subjected to the time-dependent bare and screened Coulomb potentials of the classically moving Li and O projectile ions, respectively. Three mutually perpendicular orientations of the dimer with respect to the rectilinear projectile trajectories are considered and collision events for the two ion-atom subsystems are combined in an impact parameter by impact parameter fashion and are orientation-averaged to calculate probabilities and cross sections for the ion-dimer system. The coupled-channel two-center basis generator method is used to solve the ion-atom collision problems. We concentrate the ion-dimer analysis on one-electron and…
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