Advertisements
Advertisements
Question
A 3310 Å photon liberates an electron from a material with energy 3 × 10−19 J while another 5000 Å photon ejects an electron with energy 0.972 × 10−19 J from the same material. Determine the value of Planck’s constant and the threshold wavelength of the material.
Advertisements
Solution
The energy of ejected electron is given by E = `"hc"/λ - "hc"/λ_0`
`3 xx 10^-19 = "hc" [1/(3310 xx 10^-10) - 1/λ_0]` .......(1)
`0.972 xx 10^-19 = "hc" [1/(5000 xx 10^-10) - 1/λ_0]` .......(2)
Subtracting (2) from (1), we get
`(3 - 0.972) xx 10^-19 = "hc"/10^-10 [1/3310 - 1/5000]`
`2.028 xx 10^-19 = ("h" xx 3 xx 10^8)/10^-10 [1690/(3310 xx 5000)]`
h = `(2.028 xx 10^-19 xx 10^-19 xx 3310 xx 5000)/(3 xx 10^8 xx 1690)`
h = 6.62 × 10−34 Js
Now W0 = `"hc"/λ - "E"`
= `((6.62 xx 10^-34 xx 3 xx 10^8)/(3310 xx 10^-10)) - 3 xx 10^-19`
= (6 − 3) × 10−19
W0 = 3 × 10−19 J
Threshold Wavelength,
λ0 = `"hc"/"W"_0`
= `(6.62 xx 10^-34 xx 3 xx 10^8)/(3 xx 10^-19)`
= 6.62 × 10−7 m
λ0 = 6620 × 10−10 m
APPEARS IN
RELATED QUESTIONS
A light source of wavelength 520 nm emits 1.04 × 1015 photons per second while the second source of 460 nm produces 1.38 × 1015 photons per second. Then the ratio of power of second source to that of first source is
Mention the different types of photocells.
What is a surface barrier?
Mention the two features of x-ray spectra, not explained by classical electromagnetic theory.
Give the construction and working of photo emissive cell.
Give the applications photocell.
Calculate the energies of the photons associated with the following radiation:
- violet light of 413 nm
- X-rays of 0.1 nm
- radio waves of 10 m
When a light of frequency 9 × 1014 Hz is incident on a metal surface, photoelectrons are emitted with a maximum speed of 8 × 105 ms−1. Determine the threshold frequency of the surface.
When a 6000 Å light falls on the cathode of a photo cell, photoemission takes place. If a potential of 0.8 V is required to stop emission of electron, then determine the
- frequency of the light
- energy of the incident photon
- work function of the cathode material
- threshold frequency and
- net energy of the electron after it leaves the surface.
At the given point of time, the earth receives energy from the sun at 4 cal cm–2 min–1. Determine the number of photons received on the surface of the Earth per cm2 per minute. (Given: Mean wavelength of sunlight = 5500 Å)
