Respuesta :
Answer:
- 0.99 J
Explanation:
Photons are quanta of light (electromagnetic radiation).
The energy of a photon can be determined using the Planck-Einstein's equation:
- E = hυ = h×c/λ
Where:
- E is the energy of one photon
- h is Planck's constant = 6.626 × 10 ⁻³⁴ J.s
- υ is the frequency
- c is the speed of light, which you can approximate to 3.00×10⁸ m/s
- λ is the wavelength (3.0 × 10⁻¹² m for this problem)
Substituting the data in the equation, you get:
- E = 6.626 × 10 ⁻³⁴ J.s × 3.00×10⁸ m/s / 3.0 × 10⁻¹² m = 6.626×10⁻¹⁴ J
Since that is the energy of one photon, multiply by the number of photons to get the total energy:
- Total energy = 6.626×10⁻¹⁴ J/ photon × 1.5 × 10¹³ photon = 0.99 J
Answer: 0.99 J (rounded to two significant figures).
Answer:
Total energy is 9.932 × 10^-1 Joules
Explanation:
Using the concept on energy of photons
Energy of a photon, E, is given by;
E = hf, where h is the plank's constant and f is the frequency of the radiation.
But, since frequency is given by dividing the velocity, c, by wavelength, λ,
Then; E = hc/λ
In this case; we are given more than one photons.
Therefore;
Energy = n × hc/λ , where n is the number of photons
Given;
n (the number of photons) = 1.5x10^13 photons
h (plank's constant) = 6.626× 10^-34 J/s
c (speed of light in vacuum) = 2.998 x 10^8 m/s
λ (wavelength of the radiation) = 3.0x10^-12 m
We can calculate energy;
Energy = (nhc)/λ ,
[tex]Energy = \frac{(1.5.10^{13})(6.626.10^{-34} J/s)(2.998.10^8 m/s)}{3.0.10^{-12} m}[/tex]
= 9.932 × 10^-1 Joules
Thus the total energy in the 1.5x10^13 photons is 9.932 × 10^-1 Joules