Frequency & Energy of Electromagnetic Radiation 576.3nm

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For electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength of 576.3 nm, the frequency is calculated as approximately 5.20 x 10^14 s^-1. The energy of one photon of this radiation is approximately 3.45 x 10^-19 J. To find the energy of one mole of photons, the energy per photon is multiplied by Avogadro's number, resulting in about 208 kJ. It is crucial to ensure that units are consistent throughout the calculations, particularly converting nanometers to meters. Proper unit management is essential to avoid significant errors in scientific calculations.
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For electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength of 576.3nm, what is the frequency of the radiation in s^-1? What is the energy in J of one photon of the radiation? What is the energy in kJ of one mole of photons of the radiation?

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I think I have the answer.

For the frequency, I did nu=c/lamba

nu = 2.9979x10^8/(576.3)
nu = 520197.8136
= 5.202 x 10^5


For the energy in J, I did:
6.6256x10^-34 x 5.202x10^5 = 3.447 x 10^-28


For the last part, I figured out the mols but don't know where to go from there:

3.447x10^-28 x 6.022x10^23 = 0.0002076mols


ideas? please!
 
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Yeap, everything seems okay for me. Just have to be careful with the SI unit, for example, convert pm to To calculate the energy in kJ of one mole of photons of the radiation, multiply the answer obtained in part (b) with Avogadro constant. Then you will get the answer in unit Joule. remember to divide it by 1000 to change the unit to the required KJ.
 
lkh - i am not sure what you mean - is that for a)?
 
lkh1986 mentioned several things.

1. Careful with units. If c is given in m/s, then wavelength must be in m, in order to give frequency in s-1. 1 nm (nanometer) = 10-9m

2. E = h\nu, where E is energy, h is Planck's constant and \nu is frequency. Again make sure units are consistent.

What is the energy in kJ of one mole of photons of the radiation?
Here one is presumably being asked for the energy of 6.0223 x 1023 (Avogadro's number) photons of the energy calculated previously for a single photon. 1 kJ = 1000 J.
 
astronuc, thanks.

so for
the first one, instead of using 576.3nm, I would

then multiply that by 10^-9m/1nm, so I get 5.76 x 10-7?
 
lorka150 said:
astronuc, thanks.

so for
the first one, instead of using 576.3nm, I would

then multiply that by 10^-9m/1nm, so I get 5.76 x 10-7?
Correct. It is also good practice, to write the units with the number, e.g.
576.3nm = 5.76 x 10-7 m, so that one is sure that the correct units are being used.

There have been some classic failures, such as sending a multimillion dollar satellite crashing into Mars rather than orbit because two teams used different units when data was transferred from one to the other.
 
Thank you for your help with this.

So I divided 2.9979x10^8 m/s by 5.76 x 10^-7 m
to get nu= 5.20 x 10 ^14 s^-1

Then for the second part (what is the energy in J of one photon of the raditon, I would still multiply 5.20 x 10 ^14 s^-1 by 6.6256 x 10 ^-34 J.sec, and then I would get 3.45 x 10 ^-19 J.

For the third part (what is the energy of one mole of photons of the raditation in kJ... ) I did 3.45 x 10^-19 J x 6.022 x 10 ^23 = 207759J, then divided it by 1000 to get kJ, which was 208. kJ.

I hope that's right now! Thanks so far!
 
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