Why does the absorption of EM radiation vary with wavelength?

AI Thread Summary
The absorption of electromagnetic (EM) radiation varies with wavelength because absorption occurs only when the radiation corresponds to specific energy levels in atoms. Longer wavelengths often lack these corresponding energy levels, allowing them to pass through materials. Conversely, shorter wavelengths, such as x-rays, penetrate materials more effectively due to their higher energy, which increases the likelihood of interactions with atomic electrons. Additionally, the absorption characteristics of materials can vary significantly across different wavelengths, with some materials being transparent in certain regions while highly absorptive in others. Overall, the relationship between wavelength and penetration is complex and influenced by the material's properties and the radiation's energy.
PrincePhoenix
Gold Member
Messages
116
Reaction score
2
Why does penetration increase with decrease in wavelength?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
PrincePhoenix said:
Why does penetration increase with decrease in wavelength?

For a wavelength of EM radiation to be absorbed it must correspond to an energy level in an atom. Consider the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_atom#Energy_levels".

At longer wavelengths, there is no corresponding energy level for the EM radiation, thus the wave passes through the body.

There is a nice chart from www.hyperphysics.com

em_and_the_body.gif
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • Like
Likes Salwa Asem and Simon Clement
PrincePhoenix said:
Why does penetration increase with decrease in wavelength?
I presume you mean photons? In the x-ray region, x-ray penetration increases with decreasing wavelength due to the energy dependence of the deep-core photoejection cross-section of electrons from deeply bound atomic states, e.g., k-shell.

cross section =~ Const x Z4/(hν)3

The minimum cross section is very roughly between 1 and 2 MeV.

Bob S
 
Last edited:
adamwho said:
For a wavelength of EM radiation to be absorbed it must correspond to an energy level in an atom. Consider the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_atom#Energy_levels".

At longer wavelengths, there is no corresponding energy level for the EM radiation, thus the wave passes through the body.

This is not strictly correct. If the absorption of radiation was strictly due to atomic energy levels then the absorption would occur only at very narrow bandwidths, which is contrary to common experience (like the black body radiator for example or microwave heating). The phonons in a material will absorb radiation over a larger bandwidth than the atoms alone.

As Bob S stated, the penetration of high energy waves actually increases with shortening of wavelength. The absorption properties of a material will greatly vary over the frequency range. In general, I would only say that high energy waves will pass through most objects largely unimpeded. Below x-rays, the absorption becomes widely varying and material dependent. For example, water is transparent in the visible light region (for most purposes let's say) but it is much more highly absorptive in the infrared and microwave region. So for water, over a given bandwidth, the absorption decreases as the wavelength decreases.

However, let's say we have a material that has a constant conductivity over a given bandwidth. In this case, the absorption of the radiation will increase as the wavelength decreases. This is because the radiation's loss in the material is exponentially dependent on the penetration depth in terms of wavelengths. So, keeping the material's depth the same, the electromagnetic wave will see a depth of increasing number of wavelengths as its own wavelength decreases. So we would expect the attenuation to increase with frequency.

But again, most materials do not have a consistent effective conductivity across the spectrum. And so we can only characterize small regions of the spectrum in this manner. There is also other effects that can cause deviations, like the eruption of plasmas in metals. A good conductor will not allow radiation to pass through, but at a high enough frequency, the surface of the conductor looks similar to a plasma, and the electrons will not be able to oscillate fast enough to cancel out the incident waves. And thus, the radiation can pass through.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
comparing a flat solar panel of area 2π r² and a hemisphere of the same area, the hemispherical solar panel would only occupy the area π r² of while the flat panel would occupy an entire 2π r² of land. wouldn't the hemispherical version have the same area of panel exposed to the sun, occupy less land space and can therefore increase the number of panels one land can have fitted? this would increase the power output proportionally as well. when I searched it up I wasn't satisfied with...
Back
Top