Abstract

The energy landscape of an atomic or molecular projectile interacting with a surface is often described in terms of a corrugation function that gives the classical turning point as a function of position vector parallel to the surface. It is shown here that the relative height variation of the corrugation function for scattering of atoms under classical conditions can be determined by a measurement of the maximum intensity in energy-resolved scattering spectra as a function of surface temperature. This is demonstrated by developing a semiclassical quantum theory of atomic scattering from corrugated surfaces and then extending the theory to the classical limit of large incident energies and high surface temperatures. Comparisons of calculations with available data for Ar atom scattering determine the corrugation amplitude for a molten In surface to be about 29% of the mean interparticle spacing in the bulk liquid.

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