Understanding Light and Forces: Solving a Simple Laser Question as a Student

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To calculate the force exerted by a 100mW red laser beam on a perfectly black disk, one must consider the momentum of the photons, which is given by the formula h/λ. The power of the laser indicates the number of photons hitting the disk per second, while the wavelength affects the momentum transfer during the interaction. The collision is inelastic since the photons are absorbed by the disk. Therefore, both power and wavelength are essential for determining the force on the disk. Understanding these principles allows for a correct application of momentum and impulse in this context.
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Hi I'm a student in school and I'm having a mental block on how to do this question. Could some give me a hint as to the principals I'm meant to consider /use.

Q) A red, 100mW, laser beam , wavelength 650nm, is incident normally on a perfectly black disk . Calculate the force on the disk.

I've never really had to relate photons to forces before. I tried consider change in momentum of photon is equal to impulse on black disk but that didn't work.

Thanks for the help
 
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You are correct it's just the momentum of the photons ( = h / lambda )
You can treat the photons just like you were throwing tennis balls at the disc - but remember that the photons are absorbed by the black disc so it is an in-elastic collision.
 
i tried using change of momentum = impulse but I only need to use lambda or Power not both so i think I'm doing something wrong can someone show me a solution.

Thanks
 
You need both, the power tells you how many photons/sec hit the disc and the wavelength tells you how much effect they have.
 
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