Usage of E=hv
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Usage of E=hv
Does the E=hv and E=hc/wavelength equation only work for the energy of an incoming photon and not the energy of the emitted electron?
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Re: Usage of E=hv
Use the equations that you listed for an incoming photon. Use DeBroglie's for electrons!
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Re: Usage of E=hv
Hi! I'm pretty sure that E=hv is a universal equation that works whether the electron is emitted or incoming, but many problems phrase it as an incoming electron because that is how it is perceived to monitoring devices in a lab.
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Re: Usage of E=hv
I agree! One way to think of it is that photons do not have a mass, which is why you have to use those equations. On the other hand, electrons/neutrons/protons are particles and have a mass, so they can be expressed through the De Broglie Wavelength function(Has a mass in the denominator)!
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Re: Usage of E=hv
For electrons, you can use De Broglie's equation,
which is wavelength lambda=h divided by p, in which p=mv.
which is wavelength lambda=h divided by p, in which p=mv.
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Re: Usage of E=hv
Would the question have to explicitly state that we are solving for the energy of incoming photon in order to use c=lambda(v) ? Is there another key word that would point to using an equation for a particle with no mass?
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Re: Usage of E=hv
To compute the energy of an incoming photon use E=hv, De Broigle's equation is used for electrons.
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Re: Usage of E=hv
Because photons do not have mass, you would use the equation E=hv. You would use De Broglie's for electrons, neutrons, and protons.
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Re: Usage of E=hv
Yes this is used for photons as there is no mass, but when there is mass (an electron has a constant mass listed on the constants sheet) then you use DeBroglie's equation to solve for wavelength. Hope this helped!
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Re: Usage of E=hv
Since electrons have a mass, using E=hv to calculate the energy of an electron would be incorrect. As everyone else has said, use DeBroglie's Equation to calculate speed, then KE of an electron.
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