How does heat cause radiation? And what role do electrons and spin energy play?

  • Thread starter Thread starter rcgldr
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Heat Radiation
AI Thread Summary
Heat relates to the average speed of atoms or molecules, with higher temperatures resulting in increased molecular motion and energy transfer. Collisions between molecules can transfer energy to electrons, leading to the emission of infrared photons, while other photon frequencies correspond to different energy transitions. The concept of black body radiation explains that as temperature rises, the peak frequency of emitted radiation increases across a broad spectrum. Molecules radiate energy through bound-bound or bound-free transitions, with specific photon wavelengths linked to these transitions. Nuclear spin influences interactions through spin-orbit coupling, affecting the spectral features observed in emitted radiation.
rcgldr
Homework Helper
Messages
8,923
Reaction score
675
I assume electrons emit photons in the infrared range.

Here's my dilemma, heat is a way of stating the average speed of atoms or molecules, for example 27C corresponds to air molecules moving at about 500m/s. Ok, so the molecules are moving fast, is it the collisions with other molecules that tranfers some of this energy into the electrons which then emit infrared photons (and why not photons of other frequencies)?

Also is there spin energy (spinning nucleus of atom, not "spin") in molecules, and how does this affect ineraction?
 
Science news on Phys.org
Hi Jeff , the classical view is that electons accelerating (& decelerating) give off EM radiation.

(and why not photons of other frequencies)?
Assuming we're talking about conduction electron in solids, the result is "black body" radiation and it occurs over a broad range of frequencies, with the frequency of the peak output increasing with temperature.
 
Last edited:
Temperature is more than simply a measure of how fast molecules move- it's also a measure of how much energy is available for a system to perform work. They are related through Statistical Mechanics, but the atomic model merely compliments the continuum model, it does not supercede it.

In terms of molecules, energy is radiated by molecules undergoing either bound-bound or bound-free transitions. Collisions are a typical mechanism to transfer energy (and is the mechanism for heat transfer in materials), and the photon wavelength corresponds to the particular transition- ionization corresponds to x-rays and ultraviolet, electronic transitions to visible, vibronic to infrared, and rotational to millimeter and microwave. Bound-bound transitions produce sharp spectral lines, while bound-free transitions produce broadband radiation.

The nuclear spin does have an effect (spin orbit coupling), and is manifested by hyperfine splitting of spectral features.

In the continuum model, a material is endowed with certain properties (emissivity, for example), and the radiation emitted by a meterial at temperature T is the product of the blackbody curve at temperature T and the spectral emissivity. Room temperature objects typically emit in the 8-12 micron range, the deep sky is in the millimeter/microwave region, and the sun primarily emits in the yellow.
 
Back
Top