Electromagnetic radiation and photons

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around problems related to electromagnetic radiation and photons, specifically focusing on calculating photon quantities, energy, and interactions in various scenarios involving different types of radiation.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the energy of photons in relation to their wavelength and frequency, referencing the equation E=h*f. There are attempts to apply conservation laws to problems involving photon interactions, particularly in Compton scattering scenarios.

Discussion Status

Some participants have made progress on initial problems but express uncertainty regarding the application of concepts to later questions. Hints regarding conservation laws and the nature of elastic collisions have been provided, indicating a productive direction in the discussion.

Contextual Notes

Participants are navigating through multiple problems with varying levels of complexity, and there are indications of confusion regarding the application of formulas and the interpretation of problem conditions.

freefallin38
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[SOLVED] Quantum Theory questions...

I have been having a bit of trouble on these homework questions

1)How many photons/s are contained in a beam of electromagnetic radiation of total power of 165 W when the each of the following is the source.
(a) AM radio station of 990 kHz
_____photons/s
(b) 5 nm x-rays
_____photons/s
(c) 4 MeV gamma rays?
_____photons/s

2)An experimenter finds that no photoelectrons are emitted from a particular metal unless the wavelength of light is less than 270 nm. Her experiment will require photoelectrons of maximum kinetic energy 2.2 eV. What frequency light should be used to illuminate the metal?
_____Hz

3)A photon having 64 keV scatters from a free electron at rest. What is the maximum energy that the electron can obtain?
_____keV

4) What is the minimum energy that photons must have to produce 46 keV electrons in a Compton scattering?
_____keV


I know 3 and 4 are similar.. I wasn't sure about what kind of formulas to use for any of them . Any hints or suggestions would be amazing :smile:
 
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How about an equation that might express the energy of a photon in terms of it's wavelength or frequency? You really don't have ANY such formula?
 
is E=h*f the energy for one photon?
 
freefallin38 said:
is E=h*f the energy for one photon?

Yes, now get started.
 
ok, so now I have the answers for 1 and 2. For 3 and 4 I'm still stuck about how to solve them..
 
freefallin38 said:
ok, so now I have the answers for 1 and 2. For 3 and 4 I'm still stuck about how to solve them..

Think of this collision as elastic. What does this mean?

HINT: Think "conservation laws."
 
ok, so the conservation law is hf+mc^2=hf'+E(electron)
in problem 3, I have 64kEv+mc^2=hf'+E, but how do i find the f'?
I have a feeling that if i can get 3, 4 will be easy to solve
 
Momentum is also conserved.
 
I can't find f' for problem 3. I thought that because the problem said it wanted the maximum value, that would make \vartheta =180. Using the formula 1/f'-1/f=h/mc*(1-sin\vartheta) to find f' and then when I used the conservation law, I just got the same original value of 64keV. If \vartheta isn't 180, then I can't figure out how to find f' when \vartheta and \phi are also unknown?
 

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