New Reply

Question About the Photoelectric Effect for Lower Frequencies

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Jan10-13, 11:10 PM   #1
 

Question About the Photoelectric Effect for Lower Frequencies


I'm going over the photoelectric effect and have run into a conceptual problem, and was hoping for some help in resolving it. In particular, I am looking at the frequencies below the threshold frequency of whatever metal is being examined.

So, because of the lower frequency, there will be no photoelectrons. Where I am having trouble is with what happens to the energy of the photon that is still clearly interacting with the metal. The most that I could come up with is that an electron will go into an excited state, but will not have the energy to escape, and so, is pulled back.

But if that is the case, isn't it possible that another photon could interact with the electron in this excited state, giving it the needed energy to escape? But I seem to be somehow going back to the classical view, because if that was the case, then the intensity would certainly help produce photoelectrons.

Thank you!
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
physics news on PhysOrg.com

>> The better to see you with: Scientists build record-setting metamaterial flat lens
>> New analysis yields improvements in a classic 3D imaging technique
>> Research effort deep underground could sort out cosmic-scale mysteries
Jan11-13, 01:03 AM   #2
 
Recognitions:
Homework Helper Homework Help
isn't it possible that another photon could interact with the electron in this excited state, giving it the needed energy to escape?
Yes. The excited electron decays so quickly that it is very unlikely that another photon will come along in time to eject it. The function of current vs intensity, below the cutoff frequency, is very different from that classically predicted ... and there isn't supposed to be a cutoff anyway.

http://cnx.org/content/m42558/latest...ol11406/latest
New Reply
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: Question About the Photoelectric Effect for Lower Frequencies
Thread Forum Replies
Photoelectric effect question Introductory Physics Homework 2
PhotoElectric Effect Question Advanced Physics Homework 5
photoelectric effect+frequencies General Physics 4
Photoelectric Effect question Advanced Physics Homework 3
Photoelectric effect question, help plz, thanks! Quantum Physics 2