E=hv and ΔE=hv
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E=hv and ΔE=hv
Under Atomic Spectra, I wrote down "E = hv, ΔE = hv". What is the difference between the two equations? Is E equal to ΔE? When are these equations used?
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Re: E=hv and ΔE=hv
ΔE is the change in energy and can have either a positive or negative value. You usually use the equation when an electron absorbs energy to move to a different energy level.
E is the energy of a given wavelength. It typically shows you how much energy a photon has.
E is the energy of a given wavelength. It typically shows you how much energy a photon has.
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Re: E=hv and ΔE=hv
ΔE is the energy change that occurs when an atom absorbs or emits a photon (atomic spectra experiment) whereas E is used to calculate the energy per photon when completely removing electrons from an atom (photoelectric effect).
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Re: E=hv and ΔE=hv
In chemistry the delta sign usually symbolizes change (in chemical equations it can show the application of heat). Therefore ΔE=hv is the equation for the change in energy while E=hv is just an energy calculation.
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