Significance of high charge state of projectile ions inside the target and its role on electron capture leading to target ionization phenomenon
Soumya Chatterjee, Prashant Sharma, Montanary Claudia, D. Mitra, T., Nandi

TL;DR
This study investigates how high charge states of projectile ions influence electron capture and target ionization, revealing that considering charge exchange improves agreement between experimental and theoretical ionization cross-sections.
Contribution
It introduces a methodology to account for high charge states and charge exchange effects in ionization cross-section calculations, validated with experimental data.
Findings
High projectile charge states significantly affect target ionization.
Charge exchange from target to projectile explains discrepancies in cross-sections.
Methodology aligns well with experimental results for different targets.
Abstract
The K x-ray spectra of different targets (Cu, Zn, and Ge) induced by 3 to 5 MeV/u Si projectile ions have been measured to determine the K-shell ionization cross-section. A significant difference is observed between the measurements and theoretical estimates, with the latter being about 50% below the experimental results. This underestimation} is attributed to the charge-exchange from target K-shell to projectile K- and L-shells. Such observation can only be possible if the projectile ions attain up to H- and He-like charge states. Corresponding projectile charge state fractions have been evaluated from the Lorentzian charge state distribution, where mean charge state is taken from the Fermi gas model [Phys. Rev. Lett. 30, 358 (1973)] and width from the Novikov and Teplova approach [Phys. Lett. A378, 1286-1289 (2014)]. The sum of the direct ionization cross-section and K-K + K-L capture…
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