Brian_D
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- Homework Statement
- A photon with wavelength 15 pm Compton scatters off an electron, its direction of motion changing by 110 degrees. What fraction of the photon's initial energy is lost to the electron?
- Relevant Equations
- shift in wavelength=h/mc * (1-cos theta)
h/mc=.00243 nm
Energy of a photon = hc / lambda
(1-cos 110 degrees) is .342, so the Compton shift is .00243 * 10^-9 * .342 = 8.31 * 10^-13 m.
The wavelength of the scattered photon is the Compton shift plus the initial wavelength, that is, (8.31 * 10^-13) + (15 * 10^-12), which equals 1.58 * 10^-11 m. So the energy of the scattered photon is hc / (1.58 * 10^-11), that is, 1.259 * 10^-14 j. And the initial energy of the photon is hc / (15 * 10^-12), that is, 1.362 * 10^-14 j.
Therefore, the fraction of energy lost by the photon should be (1.362 - 1.259) / 1.326, that is, 7.78%. However, the book answer key says 17.9%. If my answer is wrong, what am I doing wrong?
The wavelength of the scattered photon is the Compton shift plus the initial wavelength, that is, (8.31 * 10^-13) + (15 * 10^-12), which equals 1.58 * 10^-11 m. So the energy of the scattered photon is hc / (1.58 * 10^-11), that is, 1.259 * 10^-14 j. And the initial energy of the photon is hc / (15 * 10^-12), that is, 1.362 * 10^-14 j.
Therefore, the fraction of energy lost by the photon should be (1.362 - 1.259) / 1.326, that is, 7.78%. However, the book answer key says 17.9%. If my answer is wrong, what am I doing wrong?