Respuesta :
ok so first you need to figure out the energy of ONE photon with that wavelength. Using E=hc/lambda, you get E= 1.99 * 10^-20 J/photon. Now, how many photons do you need to add up to get to one kilojoule=1000 joules? 1000J / (1.99 * 10^-20 J/photon) = approximately 5 * 10^22 photons
hope this helps
Answer:
The number of photons are [tex]5.028\times 10^{27}[/tex].
Explanation:
[tex]E=\frac{h\times c}{\lambda}[/tex]
where,
E = energy of photon =
h = Planck's constant = [tex]6.63\times 10^{-34}Js[/tex]
c = speed of light = [tex]3\times 10^8m/s[/tex]
[tex]\lambda[/tex] = wavelength = 10.0 μm =[tex]10^{-5} m[/tex]
1 μm = [tex]10^{-6} m[/tex]
[tex]E=\frac{6.63\times 10^{-34}Js\times 3\times 10^8m/s}{10^{-5} m}[/tex]
[tex]E=1.989\times 10^{-20} Joules[/tex]
Let the n number of photons with energy equal to E' = 1.0 kJ = 1000 J
[tex]n\times E=E'[/tex]
[tex]n\times 1.989\times 10^{-20} J=1000 J[/tex]
[tex]n=\frac{1000 J}{1.989\times 10^{-20} J}=5.028\times 10^{27}[/tex]
The number of photons are [tex]5.028\times 10^{27}[/tex].
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