How can I solve these two challenging AS physics questions?

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Here are two questions I am stuck on:
1. How many visible photons are produced per second from a 2Watt lamp? It says the range of the wavelengths is near 5x10^-7m. I tried this and got 3.33x10^33Hz but apparently that's wrong so please help me.

2. A photon of frequency 6x10^14Hz explores a path 6m long. Find the time of travel and the number of rotations of the phasor. This one I don't have a clu how to start but if I get the first answer I can easily work out the number of rotations of the phasor.

Please help me as I am really stuck...physics is really hard on this AS course. Thanks for all your help

meawinner
 
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Mea, do you know the energy of each photon is given by Planck's constant times the frequency?

2 Watts is power = energy per second.
 
Yup

Yeah i tried this and that's where i got the 3.33blah blah blah... answer. I used 2W = 2joules per second and therefore if its one second it 2 joules, i put this in E=hf and it came out wrong as that's not the answer in my textbook. Dont say why can't i just copy it because the teacher will know if there is no working. But thanks anyway. Do you know any other way?
 


Originally posted by meawinner
... Do you know any other way?
Try again. First find the energy of a single photon, using E =hf. (Hint: First change the given wavelength into frequency, using the wave equation: v = fλ.)
 
I read Hanbury Brown and Twiss's experiment is using one beam but split into two to test their correlation. It said the traditional correlation test were using two beams........ This confused me, sorry. All the correlation tests I learnt such as Stern-Gerlash are using one beam? (Sorry if I am wrong) I was also told traditional interferometers are concerning about amplitude but Hanbury Brown and Twiss were concerning about intensity? Isn't the square of amplitude is the intensity? Please...
I am not sure if this belongs in the biology section, but it appears more of a quantum physics question. Mike Wiest, Associate Professor of Neuroscience at Wellesley College in the US. In 2024 he published the results of an experiment on anaesthesia which purported to point to a role of quantum processes in consciousness; here is a popular exposition: https://neurosciencenews.com/quantum-process-consciousness-27624/ As my expertise in neuroscience doesn't reach up to an ant's ear...
Insights auto threads is broken atm, so I'm manually creating these for new Insight articles. Towards the end of the first lecture for the Qiskit Global Summer School 2025, Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Olivia Lanes (Global Lead, Content and Education IBM) stated... Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/quantum-entanglement-is-a-kinematic-fact-not-a-dynamical-effect/ by @RUTA
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