What Is the Energy Difference for Argon-Ion Laser Transitions?

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The discussion revolves around calculating the energy difference for the atomic transition in an argon-ion laser emitting light at a wavelength of 488 nm. The user initially struggles with the formula E = hc/l, where they mistakenly calculate the energy and do not match any of the provided answer choices. After some guidance, they realize the need to convert the wavelength from nanometers to meters, which leads to the correct calculation. Ultimately, they successfully solve the problem and celebrate achieving a perfect score on their quiz, expressing relief and joy despite their initial frustration. The conversation highlights the importance of unit conversion in physics calculations.
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Do you fancy argon-ion lasers??

I sure dont. =/

Homework Statement


I dont. This is a practice test problem and I cannot figure it out. Frustrating!

An argon-ion laser emits a blue-green beam of light with a wavelength of 488 nm in a vacuum. What is the difference in energy in joules between the two energy states for the atomic transition that produces this light?

a.
6.18 × 10–20 J


b.
1.05 × 10–20 J


c.
5.10 × 10–28 J


d.
4.08 × 10–19 J


e.
4.76 × 10–24 J



Homework Equations



See below. I am not sure its right though since I am not producing one of the multiple choice questions.

The Attempt at a Solution



This is what I came up with so far:
so we know the wavelength (l) of the light emitted.

now, E (energy) is h * n (h = Plancks constant, n = frequency)

so

E = h * n

but also, l = c T = c / n (T is the period of the oscillation of the emitted light) which means

n = c / l

so

E = h * c / l

with this formula E can be computed

(c = 3 * 10^8 m/s is the speed of light)
my answer isn't any of the above, however. :(

help? =)
 
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Try again. The formula E=hc/l is right, and if you plug in the right numbers, it DOES give you one of the answer choices.
 


I keep getting 4.07 x 10^-28

Thats a combination of c and d haha. :(
 


Update(since I know you're all eager to hear about my adventures):

I got it! I just had to convert nm to m haha. Duh.

Oh, and I got 100% on my quiz today!WOOT WOOT!

Id start breakdancing right now out of pure joy, but I don't want to snap my legs.

This means Ill get an A for 2nd semester physics. I got an A in 1st semester too and I don't even like the subject.

*llama dance*
 
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