The Collaborative International Dictionary
Pair production \Pair" pro*duc"tion\ (Physics) The simultaneous creation of a particle and its antiparticle, such as an electron and positron, from a photon; -- usually due to its interaction with the strong field near a nucleus.
Wiktionary
n. (context physics English) The simultaneous creation of a particle and its antiparticle
WordNet
n. the transformation of a gamma-ray photon into an electron and a positron when the photon passes close to an atomic nucleus [syn: pair creation, pair formation]
Wikipedia
Pair production is the creation of an elementary particle and its antiparticle, for example creating an electron and positron, a muon and antimuon, or a proton and antiproton. Pair production often refers specifically to a photon creating an electron-positron pair near a nucleus but can more generally refer to any neutral boson creating a particle-antiparticle pair. In order for pair production to occur, the incoming energy of the interaction must be above a threshold in order to create the pair at least the total rest mass energy of the two particles and that the situation allows both energy and momentum to be conserved. However, all other conserved quantum numbers ( angular momentum, electric charge, lepton number) of the produced particles must sum to zero thus the created particles shall have opposite values of each other. For instance, if one particle has electric charge of +1 the other must have electric charge of −1, or if one particle has strangeness of +1 then another one must have strangeness of −1. The probability of pair production in photon-matter interactions increases with photon energy and also increases approximately as the square of atomic number of the nearby atom.
Usage examples of "pair production".
I know your people point to deep-field camera images going all the way back to some wonky hubble-bubble scrying mirror from the late twentieth, but we've got no evidence except some theories about the Casimir effect and pair production and spinning beakers of helium-3 –.
It would have to be something propagating through tau space to affect pair production.
Then, when the particles were inside the range of the strong force, they increased the energy gradient at the particle surfaces sufficiently to initiate pair production.