What is the Cross Section of a Hydrogen Atom in Thermal Equilibrium at 6000K?

JohnSimpson
Messages
89
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


I've been asked to find the cross section of a hydrogen atom in thermal equalibrum at 6000K for a photon which induces a transition from the ground state to the first excited state. The density of states for n=2 is 4x the density of states for n=1

i.e. g(E2) = 4*g(E1)

The lifetime of the n=2 state is 1.6 x 10^-9 s.


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



The incident photon has an energy E = hf = hc/lambda

Since the system is in thermal equlibrum, it has an average energy = kT. I am not sure what exact this is the average energy of though, the atoms? the photons? Everything?

From what I understand, the cross section is some kind of area of interaction for the process that will somehow depend on the energy of the incident photon. With this in mind, I wrote down the radius of the hydrogen atom for n =1

r1 = (epsilon)h^2 / pi * e^2 * m_e

I'm still not entirely comfortable with what the density of states represents for n=1 and n=2 respectively. I know that it sort of represents a "Price" to put an electron at that level, but I might be incorrect in saything that.

It would be very helpful if someone could clear up my misconceptions and nudge me in the right direction, thank you
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Update: I've managed to write down the number of particles in the n=1 state at any time, which is given by

g(E1)f(E1) where f(E1) is the maxwell-boltzmann probability of finding a hydrogen atom with energy E1 corresponding to ground state, and similarly the number of n=2 hydrogen atoms is

4g(E1)f(E2)
 
Anyone able to point me in the right direction?
 
Hi, I had an exam and I completely messed up a problem. Especially one part which was necessary for the rest of the problem. Basically, I have a wormhole metric: $$(ds)^2 = -(dt)^2 + (dr)^2 + (r^2 + b^2)( (d\theta)^2 + sin^2 \theta (d\phi)^2 )$$ Where ##b=1## with an orbit only in the equatorial plane. We also know from the question that the orbit must satisfy this relationship: $$\varepsilon = \frac{1}{2} (\frac{dr}{d\tau})^2 + V_{eff}(r)$$ Ultimately, I was tasked to find the initial...
The value of H equals ## 10^{3}## in natural units, According to : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_units, ## t \sim 10^{-21} sec = 10^{21} Hz ##, and since ## \text{GeV} \sim 10^{24} \text{Hz } ##, ## GeV \sim 10^{24} \times 10^{-21} = 10^3 ## in natural units. So is this conversion correct? Also in the above formula, can I convert H to that natural units , since it’s a constant, while keeping k in Hz ?
Back
Top