We present fully relativistic calculations of integral cross sections and swarm transport properties for positron–radon scattering over a wide energy range (0–1000 eV) and reduced electric field range (0.01–1000 Td). Elastic (total, momentum-transfer and viscosity-transfer), discrete excitation, direct annihilation, positronium formation and positron-impact ionization cross sections are obtained using a complex relativistic optical potential method. Owing to the large atomic number of radon and the absence of experimental scattering data, a consistent relativistic treatment is essential. The present work provides the first fully relativistic, internally consistent cross-section dataset for positron swarms in radon gas. Using a multi-term solution of Boltzmann’s equation, steady-state transport coefficients are calculated and found to be strongly influenced by energy-dependent reactive loss, particularly positronium formation. Significant divergence between bulk and flux transport coefficients is observed, including non-monotonic bulk drift velocities and pronounced suppression of longitudinal bulk diffusion at intermediate fields (0.3–1000 Td). Time-dependent field-free calculations further quantify thermalization and annihilation dynamics through the evolution of the mean energy and ⟨Zeff⟩(t). These results provide a robust theoretical foundation for modelling positron transport and annihilation in radon and other heavy noble gases where relativistic and reactive effects are crucial.
Boyle et al. (Thu,) studied this question.