What happens to energy levels when electrons collide with an atom?

AI Thread Summary
When an electron with kinetic energy of 5*10^-17 J collides with an atom's electron in the ground state, the atom may become ionized, transferring energy to the free electron. The ground state electron, initially at -4.11*10^-17 J, absorbs energy, potentially leading to ionization. The remaining energy contributes to the kinetic energy of the ejected electron. Following this, the electrons in higher energy levels may drop to lower levels, emitting photons with specific frequencies and wavelengths. The term "subsequently" in the question suggests a focus on the behavior of electrons after the initial collision and energy transfer.
Millan
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Hi:

a) an atoms electron is in the ground state (4.11*10^ -17). An electron with ke 5*10^-17 collides with the atom, what happens to the energy.

b) What could subsequently happen to the electrons in the higher energy levels

help please
 
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You mean the atom's electron is in the ground state, with E = - 4.11E-17 J
Stable situations usually have negative Total Energy ...

What happens if the stray electron collides with the atom's electron?
How much Energy would that "ground state" electron have then?
How far from the atom would it get before it runs out of KE?
 
Yes energy = - 4.11E-17 J

my mistake lol

I think the answer is that the atom gets ionised and the remaining enegry becomes the KE of the free electron.

but I am confused as to the words 'what happens to the ENERGY' (is it just absorbed by the electron in the ground state and the rest goes to KE)

and part b) i think it is the electrons drop down energy levels emmiting light - photons with discrete frequencies hence discrete wavelengths.

but the questions says 'subsequently' , so I am not sure if its right or is its just there to put you off.
 
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