ABSTRACT

Stationary states are unavoidable from the practical viewpoint, since all the computations of observables, such as cross sections and other experimentally measurable physical quantities, are carried out within timeindependent scattering theory. In a scattering experiment, one attempts to determine the momentum of the impact projectile as precisely as possible. However, in the standard formulation of scattering theory, one tries to reach the same ideal goal by identifying the initial state in the remote past with the plane wave. The problem of the asymptotic convergence of scattering states cannot be formulated in the same way for both proper and improper state vectors. The optical theorem is a convenient way of computing the total cross section Q, when one knows the value of the imaginary part of the scattering amplitude in the forward direction. The scattered particles are moved away from the incident beam for a certain amount which is proportional to the value of the total cross section Q.