How does the Doppler Effect apply to a laser connected to an oscillating spring?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around applying the Doppler Effect to a laser connected to an oscillating spring, specifically in relation to the Paschen series lines of hydrogen. The user is trying to determine the original frequency of the laser and the maximum velocity of the oscillation needed to achieve the observed frequencies. They recognize that the Doppler shift equations will be essential but struggle with the infinite velocity values of the oscillating spring. The conversation highlights the need to consider the range of shifted frequencies and suggests that the original frequency could be centered within this range to account for maximum shifts. The user ultimately questions the feasibility of achieving such high velocities in a real-world scenario.
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Homework Statement



A laser of frequency f0 is connected to a spring which oscillates in one dimension with a period T and amplitude A. The laser excites the 1st four Paschen series lines of hydrogen. What is f0

Homework Equations



I'm assuming that I'll need the Doppler shift equations,

f = f0[ (1 + β) / (1 - β) ]1/2 (for approaching)

and

f = f0[ (1 - β) / (1 + β) ]1/2 (for receding)

Where β = v/c

The Attempt at a Solution



I've identified the Paschen series for hydrogen to be 1870 nm, 1280 nm, 1090 nm, and 1000 nm.

I don't understand where I should go next. Initially I thought that I could plug values into the equation and solve for the original frequency but I don't see what values I could put in. For an oscillating spring, there will be infinity values of the velocity from 0 to whatever the maximum velocity is. So I don't see how I could solve it?

Part 2 of the problem also asks what the maximum velocity of this oscillation must be to give the observed lines.

Any suggestions are much appreciated.
 
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Unless the problem is referring to some sort of weird quantum system (and I don't think it is), it probably means that there are four particular values of the velocity between -vmax and vmax at which the Doppler-shifted laser frequency (or wavelength, if you prefer) corresponds to one of the first four Paschen lines. So you basically have some information - not complete information, but still some information - about the range over which the Doppler-shifted frequency varies. The unshifted laser frequency also has to be somewhere within that range, right? Think about that.

I wonder if you can also assume that no other hydrogen emission lines are excited. That would give you an upper limit on the size of the range of shifted frequencies...
 
diazona said:
I wonder if you can also assume that no other hydrogen emission lines are excited. That would give you an upper limit on the size of the range of shifted frequencies...

Sorry, yes, it is stated in the problem that no other lines are excited.
diazona said:
there are four particular values of the velocity between -vmax and vmax at which the Doppler-shifted laser frequency (or wavelength, if you prefer) corresponds to one of the first four Paschen lines. So you basically have some information - not complete information, but still some information - about the range over which the Doppler-shifted frequency varies. The unshifted laser frequency also has to be somewhere within that range, right? Think about that.

So the range of wavelengths is 870 nm, if the four lines are 1870, 1280, 1090 and 1000.

Would I just assume that the original frequency is exactly in the center of this range? That way it would shift to the highest and lowest frequencies at the positive and negative maximum velocities?

Then to calculate what this maximum velocity would need to be, I just take the 1000 nm (or the 1870 nm) and plug it into the Doppler equation?
 
Dawei said:
Would I just assume that the original frequency is exactly in the center of this range? That way it would shift to the highest and lowest frequencies at the positive and negative maximum velocities?

Then to calculate what this maximum velocity would need to be, I just take the 1000 nm (or the 1870 nm) and plug it into the Doppler equation?

OK, doing this, I get a speed of 0.29C for the velocity of the spring--i.e., much faster than what could ever be realistically achieved.

What am I missing here? There has to be something. A monochromatic laser going back and forth, how is it capable of reaching such a wide range of frequencies? There has to be something more to this that I'm not seeing :confused:
 
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