Photoelectric effect and stopping potential

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the photoelectric effect and the relationship between stopping potential and photon wavelength. A stopping potential of 0.5 V is observed with 490 nm light, and the query seeks the wavelength corresponding to a 1.50 V stopping potential. The relevant formula connecting photon energy and wavelength is highlighted, specifically E = hc/λ, where E represents photon energy. Participants emphasize the need for clarity on how photon energy influences emitted electron energy and the role of stopping potential. Understanding these concepts is crucial for solving the posed problem effectively.
dawn_pingpong
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I have a question:

A stopping potential of 0.5 V is required when a phototube is illuminated with monochromatic light of 490nm wavelength. The wavelength of a different monochromatic illumination for which the stopping potential is 1.50V is closest to:

a) 350nm
b) 330 nm
c) 380nm
d) 400 nm
e) 500 nm

I am not very clear with the concept of this whole thing, so it will be nice if anyone can explain the concepts (or rather what are the fornulas) too. Thank you.
 
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dawn_pingpong said:
I have a question:

A stopping potential of 0.5 V is required when a phototube is illuminated with monochromatic light of 490nm wavelength. The wavelength of a different monochromatic illumination for which the stopping potential is 1.50V is closest to:

a) 350nm
b) 330 nm
c) 380nm
d) 400 nm
e) 500 nm

I am not very clear with the concept of this whole thing, so it will be nice if anyone can explain the concepts (or rather what are the fornulas) too. Thank you.

Welcome to the PF.

What can you tell us about the photoelectric effect? How does the energy of the incident photons affect the energy of the emitted electrons? What is the energy of a photon in terms of its wavelength?

There is a reason that we have a Homework Help Template here at the PF. It requires you to list the Relevant Equations...
 
I'm sorry I deleted the template... I thought that it was just the prompts...

This is what I know:
Planck's Law
$E=frac(hc/lambda)$, which in this case equals to 4.0567E-19

then KE(max)=eV。=E-work function

(from what I understand V is the stopping potential)

Then, uhhhh. I start to confuse myself. I suppose that e in this case is the energy of an electron. I only have the formulas from powerpoint slides (for lessons that I didn't attend), but they are not very well explained.

Well, Thank you all.
 
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