Emission Spectrum - Does Energy Always Transfer in Photon Form?

In summary, the energy received by an electron when it moves to a lower state is not always transferred in the form of a photon. It can also be transferred through collisions with other atoms and molecules. When two atoms bond and release energy, it mostly comes from the change in energy of the electrons. In fire, the energy released from bonding between carbon and oxygen atoms causes a chain reaction, but collisions with other atoms may decrease the amount of bonding over time. The fire continues as long as there is oxygen and fuel.
  • #1
cubud
29
0
Hi all

I'm unsure about something and so would like to pose the following question.

When an electron moves to a lower state it emits energy in the form of a photon. But in order to get excited into this higher state it must first receive a minimum amount of energy. Is the energy received originally not always transferred in the form of a photon?
 
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  • #2
Hi!
As I know electron while changing it's states always receives or emits only EM energy (photons)!
 
  • #3
and not only electron-all the electric charges receives or emits EM(photons) energy while changing it's speed.
 
  • #4
So if all energy is always transferred via photons why do we see a distinct emission spectrum for hydrogen and not photons in all the other frequencies?
 
  • #5
it's because of the object you Chose!
How lasers work?they are getting energy from the light (electrons get to higher states) and when you turn off the light electrons get to lower states by turn-emitting EM waves in the frequencies we see,but there are lot's of objects that emits EM waves in not visual for us frequencies !
 
  • #6
cubud said:
Is the energy received originally not always transferred in the form of a photon?

It is not.

In an ordinary neon light for example, the process begins with an electrical discharge between electrodes, creating fast moving electrons that collide with gas atoms.
The collision transfers energy to the gas atoms, which are left in an excited state. They subsequently decay, emitting UV light. (The UV is converted by a secondary energy transfer with the coating on the tube.)
 
  • #7
AJ Bentley said:
The collision transfers energy to the gas atoms, which are left in an excited state. They subsequently decay, emitting UV light. (The UV is converted by a secondary energy transfer with the coating on the tube.)

But as I know lasers emits not only UV light Sir!?
 
  • #8
levonnikox said:
But as I know lasers emits not only UV light Sir!?

In the Helium Neon laser, the process again begins with collision of electrons with the Helium gas.
This excites helium from the ground state to the 23S1 and 21S0 excited states. Further collision of the excited helium atoms with the ground-state neon atoms results in transfer of energy to the neon atoms, exciting neon electrons into the 3s2 level. When that level decays under stimulated emission it emits the familiar laser light.
 
  • #9
Yes I know the process but read attentively please. I just said that not only UV light emits, but 632,8nm EM wave too which is in the red portion of the visible spectrum.
 
  • #10
cubud said:
Hi all

I'm unsure about something and so would like to pose the following question.

When an electron moves to a lower state it emits energy in the form of a photon. But in order to get excited into this higher state it must first receive a minimum amount of energy. Is the energy received originally not always transferred in the form of a photon?

The initial energy can be anything. In your typical fluorescent lights, you have an electron source (usually via thermionic emission). These electrons are accelerated due to some potential. But because the tube is filled with gas (typically mercury), these electrons collide with these gas molecules and cause them to be excited to a higher energy. So here, the initial energy was in the form of the kinetic energy of the electrons. It doesn't always have to be a photon.

Zz.
 
  • #11
Thanks very much for your answers.

In that case where the source is a photon do we see absorption lines in the spectrum because
A: The photon that was previously heading towards us is temporarily absorbed by the atom and then emitted in a random direction, causing a drop in the average number of photons reaching us from the source of that frequency.
B: Sometimes a 2nd amount of photon energy will hit the excited electron before it drops to its base state and move it to a higher orbit, the electron may then drop 2 or more shells and release a higher frequency photon - so even if by pure chance it still heads towards us it will not be of the original frequency?

In the case of heat energy is it the collisions of the atoms in the source striking against other atoms which transfers energy?

And finally...

When two atoms bond (such as h2o) they release energy, from which part of the atom does this energy come?

Thank you all so much!
 
  • #12
Well, on one level, energy is transmitted either through photon emission, or 'non-radiatively' through collisions of atoms, molecules and ions. On another level, the collisions occur through electromagnetic force, which is mediated by photons. So in the end it's just photons really, and the distinction is between real photons and the virtual, force-mediating ones that aren't detected.

To answer the second question, it's A. When you look at absorption, you're looking at the amount of light lost due to scattering. When you look at an emission spectrum, the detector is at a 90 degree angle to the exciting source, so you only see the scattered light.

When two atoms bond and release energy, almost all that energy comes from the change in (kinetic/potential) energy of the electrons.
 
  • #13
alxm said:
When two atoms bond and release energy, almost all that energy comes from the change in (kinetic/potential) energy of the electrons.

When you introduce enough energy which causes a particle collision and a bonding between carbon and two oxygen atoms we essentially have fire. The energy released from the bonding then applies a force to another atom causing that to fire off and collide, and so we have a chain reaction.

However as these atoms fly around they would sometimes hit other atoms to which they do not bond so this would surely cause less CO2 bonding over time, so what is it that keeps a fire burning as long as you don't run out of oxygen and fuel?
 
  • #14
cubud said:
However as these atoms fly around they would sometimes hit other atoms to which they do not bond so this would surely cause less CO2 bonding over time, so what is it that keeps a fire burning as long as you don't run out of oxygen and fuel?

You're going to have to rephrase this. I can't make any sense of it.
 
  • #15
cubud said:
When you introduce enough energy which causes a particle collision and a bonding between carbon and two oxygen atoms we essentially have fire. The energy released from the bonding then applies a force to another atom causing that to fire off and collide, and so we have a chain reaction.

However as these atoms fly around they would sometimes hit other atoms to which they do not bond so this would surely cause less CO2 bonding over time, so what is it that keeps a fire burning as long as you don't run out of oxygen and fuel?

As long as the temperature remains sufficient, the reaction will continue. Why would there be less bonding over time?
 
  • #16
Some of the temperature radiates into the air and heats things around the fire (such as me, watching it) so the amount of heat energy within the fire is decreasing. Where does the extra heat energy come from?
 
  • #17
cubud said:
Hi all

I'm unsure about something and so would like to pose the following question.

When an electron moves to a lower state it emits energy in the form of a photon. But in order to get excited into this higher state it must first receive a minimum amount of energy. Is the energy received originally not always transferred in the form of a photon?
Franck and Hertz accelerated electrons in a dilute gas of mercury vapor until at about 4.9 volts, the electrons lost a lot of energy in the inelastic collisions with the mercury atoms. The inelastic collisions were exciting the mercury atoms. This won the Nobel Prize in 1925:

http://dev.physicslab.org/Document.aspx?doctype=3&filename=AtomicNuclear_FranckHertzExperiment.xml

Bob S
 

1. What is an emission spectrum?

An emission spectrum is a pattern of wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation emitted by a substance when it is excited. It is unique to each element and can be used to identify the composition of a substance.

2. How is an emission spectrum produced?

An emission spectrum is produced when atoms are excited by heat, electricity, or light and their electrons jump to higher energy levels. As the electrons return to their original energy levels, they release energy in the form of photons, which make up the emission spectrum.

3. Does energy always transfer in photon form in an emission spectrum?

Yes, in an emission spectrum, energy is always transferred in the form of photons. Photons are the smallest units of electromagnetic radiation and are responsible for the emission of light.

4. Can the energy of a photon change in an emission spectrum?

Yes, the energy of a photon can change in an emission spectrum. The energy of a photon is directly proportional to its frequency. Therefore, if the frequency of the emitted photon changes, its energy will also change.

5. Why is the emission spectrum of each element unique?

The emission spectrum of each element is unique because each element has a unique set of energy levels for its electrons. When these electrons are excited, they release specific amounts of energy, resulting in a unique pattern of wavelengths in the emission spectrum.

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