Photons transfer energy to the atoms in the metal plate?

AI Thread Summary
Photons transfer energy to atoms in a metal plate by causing electrons to move to higher energy levels upon collision. This energy transfer can result in increased atomic vibrations, contributing to the heating of the metal. While photons are massless, they possess momentum and energy, which can be described using equations from quantum mechanics and electromagnetism. The interaction can lead to phenomena such as the photoelectric effect, where an electron may be ejected if the photon's energy exceeds the metal's work function. Overall, the discussion clarifies the relationship between photon energy, electron behavior, and heat generation in metals.
wolram
Gold Member
Dearly Missed
Messages
4,410
Reaction score
555
When sunlight hits an object, for instance a metal plate, the plate will
get hotter, now as i understand, heat is caused by atoms vibrating, so
the photons hitting the metal plate must have caused the atoms in it
to vibrate, my question is, how do massless? photons transfer energy
to the atoms in the metal plate?
 
Science news on Phys.org
The photons have no rest mass, but they do have energy (kinetic energy). Therefore when the photon collides with the atom, I presume it would transfer some of this kinetic energy to the atom which could heat it up.
 
Petrushka
I must admit that i am stupid, i did not realize that if something is massless, that
it could have kinetic energy, is this related to relativistic mass?
 
No no no no. No relativity here. No stupidity either. That is pretty much what is special about photons, they have energy but no mass. If we speak of photons, then the energy of the IR beam is E = hNf (Planck's constant x number of photons x frequency of the photons). But we don't even need Plank. You know about electric fields? A beam of light is a wave of electric fields (and magnetic but not important for now). When the electric fields reach the metal, they make its atomes and electrons move, like any field does. Relations for the energy of a EM wave can be derived from Maxwell's work.
 
wolram said:
Petrushka
I must admit that i am stupid, i did not realize that if something is massless, that
it could have kinetic energy, is this related to relativistic mass?

Even photons have mass. Many people call that mass relativistic mass. In such a collision of photon with atom the sum of the (relativistic) mass is conserved. Momentum is conserved too and photons have momentum. If the atom absorbes the photon then the atom will be in a higher energy state. That is not called an increase in heat. Heat pertains to a collection of particles like a solid made of atoms or a gas of atoms etc.

Pete
 
when a photon hits a metal plate, the photon hits an electron and sends it to a higher energy level and then back down to its original level emitting another photon. This is why metals are shiny. Is it this oscillation from one energy level and back that causes the heat to be produced?
 
Thanks for the replies so far, but I am still confused between the,
photon "hitting", an electron, as in a collision between two bodies,
and the atom "absorbing", the energy of the photon.
 
Nenad said:
when a photon hits a metal plate, the photon hits an electron and sends it to a higher energy level and then back down to its original level emitting another photon. This is why metals are shiny. Is it this oscillation from one energy level and back that causes the heat to be produced?

Heat is also photons. Suppose a visible photon makes an electron go from level 2 to level 8. The electron may well drop back to level 6, then 4, then 2 again, emmiting 3 lower energy (= IR = heat) photons instead. This is why the color black is hot. Metals are shiny because they reflect the photons. they bounce back without any electrons changing levels.

pmb_phy, photons have momentum, but no mass (Not in conventionnal theories anyway, and I would need a very good reference to be convinced if it did in even in TOE efforts). Relativistic mass is the mass of an object when it is moving very fast, which is a function of the object's mass at rest. In the case of a photon, they are both zero. The problem from wolram's first post doesn't seem to have anything to do with relativity and should be completely answerable without it.
 
Gonzolo said:
pmb_phy, photons have momentum, but no mass ..
I said they have relativistic mass. They don't have rest mass.
Relativistic mass is the mass of an object when it is moving very fast, which is a function of the object's mass at rest.
Inertial mass, (aka relativistic mass), m, is defined such that mv is a conserved quantity. Momentum is then defined as p = mv. Therefore anything that has momentum has relativistic mass - by definition. Any decent relativity text will tell you that.

Pete
 
Last edited:
  • #10
wolram said:
Thanks for the replies so far, but I am still confused between the,
photon "hitting", an electron, as in a collision between two bodies,
and the atom "absorbing", the energy of the photon.

when the photon hits the electron, the electron is in a discreet energy level in which it stays in by the attractive elecromagnetic force towards the positively charged nucleus. Once the photon hits, it may give the electron enough energy to escape this energy level and to go into a higher energy level, (further from the nucleus). This photon, if it has enough momentum can even knock out the electron totally out of the metal (photoelecric effect) or it can have a low enough energy and just bounce off the electron causing no effect. Its not hard to understand. The energy of the photon is
E=nhf \\
E=energy\ n=integer \\
h=planck's\ constant\ = 6.63x10^{-34J/s}\\
f=frequency\\
or
E = \frac{hc}\lambda \\

This energy equation wan be used to determine what will happen when the photon hits the metal. For example, the photoelectric effect can be determined weather it will occur or not.

E = W_o + E_k
W_o = work\ function\ of\ the\ metal
E_k = kinetic\ energy\ left\ after\ collision\ with\ electron

if the energy of the photon is equal to or greater than the work function of the metal, then the photoelectric effect will occur, if it is a lot greater, then the effect will occur and the electron will have a lot of kinetic energy left over. If the photon's energy is less than the work function, then the electron will oscilate.
 
Last edited:
  • #11
Thankyou Nenad.
 
  • #12
...and thanks pmb_phy, I'll check on that.
 
Back
Top