New Reply

well depth

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Oct4-12, 05:39 AM   #1
 

well depth


hello!

what is actually the "well depth" or the "depth of the well" ?

maybe it doesnt help that english is not my native language, but anyway, I cant find some reference

I found the term to be used in context of describing the energy of the bonds

thanks!
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
chemistry news on PhysOrg.com

>> Explainer: What are chemical weapons?
>> Scientists develop advanced biological computer
>> Biofilms move electrons long distances across two distinct layers, even under starving conditions
Oct4-12, 06:45 AM   #2
 
I can't way for sure without knowing the context, but a well is a hole in the ground from which you draw or pump water. But it could mean something else in another context.
Oct4-12, 06:54 AM   #3
 
Sounds like your are talking about the energy well that exist in a tiny region of space surrounded by regions of higher potential energy. A place that a particle gets stuck because it needs kenetic energy to escape. Which is suppose described a hole in the ground as well.
Oct4-12, 08:19 AM   #4
 

well depth


in Lenard-Jones potential ?
Oct4-12, 02:57 PM   #5
 
Pick up a book in quantum mechanics, it will explain everything much better than we can.
Oct4-12, 02:58 PM   #6
 
In a graph of energy versus position, there can be a region of space where the energy is lower than other nearby regions. Graphically, this looks like a hole in the ground and if you want to picture things classically you can think about an electron being a ball trapped in the hole (an electron in a bond, say) that needs some energy put into it to get it out of the hole (break the bond). The deeper the well, the stronger the bond.
New Reply
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: well depth
Thread Forum Replies
apparent depth Introductory Physics Homework 5
What is the depth x of the oil? Introductory Physics Homework 1
setup help needed:apparent depth vs. actual depth Introductory Physics Homework 17
Out of my depth here... General Discussion 34
Actual Depth and Apparent Depth Introductory Physics Homework 19