For question 4 on Midterm 2 it asks to find the wavelength of the ejected electron, which I knew how to do; however 4b asks "can the wavelike properties of ejected electrons in part A be detected?" and this question threw me off can someone explain the conceptual answer to this question; does it relate to the speed of light at all? That's the only thing I could think of to answer this question
Can someone clarify, please
-Jimmy Lira 1G
Midterm #2 question 4a,b
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Re: Midterm #2 question 4a,b
I'm not sure if this is correct, but I think part b is asking if the wavelength is too small to be detected. So you would just have to see if your final answer is a very very small number.
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Re: Midterm #2 question 4a,b
Miya is right. I believe the cutoff is 10^-18 for the wavelength. If the wavelength is smaller than that, as is the wavelength for objects such as a ball or a car, then wavelength properties cannot be detected, and that is why we say that these objects do not have wavelength properties.
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Re: Midterm #2 question 4a,b
I suggest watching the video module on this topic! I believe it was mentioned that the wavelength could be detected up to the negative 12 or 15 power, but I'm not exactly sure if an exact value was said.
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Re: Midterm #2 question 4a,b
Hi, I remember hearing in class that it was 10^-18. I'm not sure if you remember but in lecture, we did practice problems where the wavelength was something like 10^-31 and we came to the conclusion that because it was so small we would not be able to detect it. Hope that helps!
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Re: Midterm #2 question 4a,b
The question is essentially asking if the wavelength of the ejected electron is too small to be detected. I'm pretty sure this means is it smaller than 10^-18 power.
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