Photoelectric Effect: X-ray, 2 Metals, 5 & 2.3eV Work Function

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
3 replies · 2K views
Ekramul Towsif
Messages
4
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


X·ray is produced when an electron is incident on a metal surface with ##2x10^8 ms^-1## velocity
.Applying this X-ray on the surface of two metals having work function of 5 eV and 2.3eV, photoelectric effect is observed.
e by

Homework Equations



The Attempt at a Solution


##E = K_{max} + \phi##
##hf = \frac 1 2mv^2 + hf_o##

i got stucked here. i don't know what to do next
[/B]
 

Attachments

  • 15491787_1814655888808897_98703582_o.jpg
    15491787_1814655888808897_98703582_o.jpg
    33 KB · Views: 458
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
Your post is difficult to read, and confused. Could you more accurately produce the question as it was asked?
 
Cutter Ketch said:
Your post is difficult to read, and confused. Could you more accurately produce the question as it was asked?
which part or portion is difficult to undestand ?
 
Ekramul Towsif said:
which part or portion is difficult to undestand ?

Well this is very interesting. I would have quoted the confused questions in the OP: the lack of a part a or b, the fact that part d was neither a sentence nor a question nor in fact an intelligible phrase, but it appears you've edited the post. Now there are no questions at all and you've pasted in a picture of your problem. Now here's the interesting part. Although better than the OP, the question as given to you is pretty confused. I presume that whoever wrote it speaks something other than English as a first language. Ok, well let's see what we can do.

From your unedited OP I presume you've answered a and b. For c you posted an energy equation which appears to be for scattering in that there is an h f0. Here there is no h f0. The electron does not necessarily have to give all of its energy to a single X-ray, but that is the most it can do, so I think that is what they want you to assume. So what is the frequency of the x-ray if all of the kinetic energy of the electron produces one x-ray photon?

The last part seems to be asking if that frequency of an X-ray can liberate an electron given the two work functions. Well, does it have enough energy?