Blackbody RadiationPhotoelectric Effect
Wave-Particle DualitySPH4U
Everything comes unglued
The predictions of “classical physics” (Newton’s laws and Maxwell’s equations) are sometimes completely, utterly WRONG.
classical physics says that an atom’s electrons should fall into the nucleus and STAY THERE. No chemistry, no biology can happen.
classical physics says that toaster coils radiate an infinite amount of energy: radio waves, visible light, X-rays, gamma rays,…
The source of the problem
It’s not possible, even “in theory” to know everything about a physical system.
knowing the approximate position of a particle corrupts our ability to know its precise velocity (“Heisenberg uncertainty principle”)
Particles exhibit wave-like properties. interference effects!
The scale of the problem
Let’s say we know an object’s position to an accuracy Dx.
How much does this mess up our ability to know its speed?
Here’s the connection between Dx and Dv (Dp = mDv):
That’s the “Heisenberg uncertainty principle.” h 6.610-34 J·s
4
hp x
“It is physically impossible to predict simultaneously the exact position and exact momentum of a particle.”
Atomic scale effects
Small Dx means large Dv since4
hv
m x
Example: an electron (m = 9.110-31 kg) in an atom is confined to a region of size x ~ 510-11 m.
How is the minimum uncertainty in its velocity?
Plug in, using h = 6.610-34 to find v > 1.1106 m/sec
ExampleThe speed of an electron (m = 9.110-31 kg) is measured to have a value of 5 x 103 m/s to an accuracy of 0.003 percent. Determine the uncertainty in determining its position.
31 3
27
9.11 10 5.00 10
4.56 10
mkg
s
kg m
s
p mv
27
31
0.00003 4.56
0.
10
1.37 10
00003
kg m
s
kg
p
m
p
s
34
31
4
6.63 10
44 1.37 1
0.38
0
3 8 10
5
4
. 5
J shx
kg mps
m
m
hx p
m
ExampleThe speed of an bullet (m = 0.020 kg) is measured to have a value of 300 m/s to an accuracy of 0.003 percent. Determine the uncertainty in determining its position.
0.020 300
6
m
p
kgs
m
k
v
g m
s
4
0.00003 6
1.8 1
0.
0
00003
k
p
m
s
k
p
g
g m
s
3
34
4
1
6.63 10
44 1.8
2.93 1
10
0
4
m
J shx
h
m
x p
kgps
ExampleA proton has a mass of 1.67 x 10-27 kg and is close to motionless as possible. What minimum uncertainty in its momentum and in its kinetic energy must it have if it is confined to a region :
(a) 1.0 mm(b) An atom length 5.0 x 10-10m(c) About the nucleus of length 5.0 x 10-15m
ExampleA proton has a mass of 1.67 x 10-27 kg and is close to motionless as possible. What minimum uncertainty in its momentum and in its kinetic energy must it have if it is confined to a region :(a) 1.0 mm
3
34
3
2
6.63 10
4 4 1.0 10
4
5.28 10
J
h
shp
x
x p
m
kg m
s
34
5
27 3
6.63 10
4 4 1.67 10 1.0 10
3.16 10
p m
J sh
m
s
v
vm x kg m
2
22
3
7 5
7
11.67 10 3.16
8.33 1
1
0
02
2
1m
kgs
J
KE mv
ExampleA proton has a mass of 1.67 x 10-27 kg and is close to motionless as possible. What minimum uncertainty in its momentum and in its kinetic energy must it have if it is confined to a region :(b) An atom length 5.0 x 10-10m
3
25
4
10
6.63 10
4 4 5.0 10
1.0 0
4
6 1
J shp
kg
x
s
x
m
m
hp
34
27 10
6.63 10
4 4 1.67 10 5.0 1
2
0
63.
J shv
m
p m
x m
v
m
s
kg
2
227
24
11.67 10 63
3.33 1
22
1
2
0
.m
kgs
m
J
KE v
ExampleA proton has a mass of 1.67 x 10-27 kg and is close to motionless as possible. What minimum uncertainty in its momentum and in its kinetic energy must it have if it is confined to a region :(c) About the nucleus of length 5.0 x 10-15m
3
20
4
15
6.63 10
4 4 5.0 10
1.0 0
4
6 1
J shp
kg
x
s
x
m
m
hp
34
6
27 20
6.63 10
4 4 1.
6.32 10
67 10 1.06 10
J shv
m x kg m
p
m
s
m v
2
22
1
7 6
4
11.67 10 6.32
3.33 10
0
2
2
1
1m
kgs
K
J
mv
m
E
Notice that when we consider a particle (say a proton), that is confined to a small region, the Quantum Mechanics requires that such a particle cannot have a precise momentum (or even momentum of zero). This means that even at absolute zero, this proton must have kinetic energy. This energy is called the “zero point energy”, and there is no way to avoid this.
Quantum Mechanics!At very small sizes the world is VERY
different!Energy can come in discrete packetsEverything is probability; very little is absolutely
certain.Particles can seem to be in two places at same
time.Looking at something changes how it behaves.
Another Consequence of Heisenberg’s Uncertainty
Principle A quantum particle can never be in a state of rest,
as this would mean we know both its position and momentum precisely
Thus, the carriage will be jiggling around thebottom of the valleyforever
Blackbody Motivation
• The black body is importance in thermal radiation theory and practice.
• The ideal black body notion is importance in studying thermal radiation and electromagnetic radiation transfer in all wavelength bands.
• The black body is used as a standard with which the absorption of real bodies is compared.
Hot objects glow (toaster coils, light bulbs, the sun).
As the temperature increases the color shifts from Red to Blue.
The classical physics prediction was completely wrong! (It said that an infinite amount of energy should be radiated by an object at finite temperature.)
Blackbody Radiation
Maxwell Boltzmann Distributions
I think gas consists of billions and billions of fast randomly moving
molecules that bounce off each other as well as the walls of
the container.
In 1859 Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell developed his theory on the kinetic theory of gasses that explained the macroscopic properties of pressure, temperature and volume.
If we accept the idea that when we heat a
gas, that heating causes the molecules
to move faster and thus bang into the
walls of the container more frequently.
O.K. James how does this kinetic theory of gasses
relate temperature to pressure.
Maxwell Boltzmann DistributionsMaxwell statement was a bold one. He claimed that the macroscopic properties of a gas (that was easily measured in a laboratory) could be predicted by a microscopic model that consisted of billions and billions of gas molecules.
I had to make 4 assumptions before I was comfortable with
my kinetic model.
1. The molecules act like tiny spherical marbles. With the diameter of the marbles much smaller than the distance between them.
2. The collisions between the molecules where elastic (no energy was lost).
3. In between the collisions the molecules moved according to Newton’s Laws (constant speed and straight line).
4. The initial position and velocity of each molecule was random.
My last statement uniquely allowed me to apply a branch of mathematics
called statistics to prove my theory was quantitatively
consistent with the physical properties of gasses that where measured in the
laboratories.
Maxwell Boltzmann Distributions
Temperature is actually the measure of microscopic mean square velocity (average velocity multiplied by itself). Maxwell’s theory is the prediction of the probable velocity distribution of the molecules. That is it gives the range of velocities.
You used statistics and thus used the averages. Why did
you not calculate the motion of the
molecules using my Laws?
Man, I just couldn’t. There are just too
many gas molecules, the task would be
impossible. Even in a small sample called a
mole, there are 6x1023 molecules.
602,214,179,300,000,000,000,000
Maxwell Boltzmann Distributions
How did you go about
measuring these average
values?
I devised an apparatus that allowed me to
determine the kinetic energies and thus the
velocities
Because all atoms of an element have roughly the same mass, the kinetic energy of identical atoms is determined by velocity (KE= ½mv2)
Maxwell Boltzmann Distributions
The resulting disk looks like this.
Fraction of molecules
Kinetic energy
Molecules hit disk here first
The faster moving (higher Kinetic
Energy molecules) start hits the disk early at around 11
Molecules hit disk last
The slower moving (lower Kinetic Energy molecules) start hits
the disk later at around 3
If we plot the intensity of the dots on a graph we get a graph of fraction of atoms/molecules vs. kinetic energy:
This curve is characteristic of all molecules The curve is elongated due to how atoms collide, and to the units of the graph Recall all particles are in motion. An average speed will be reached. The graph is skewed because 0 is the lower limit, but theoretically there is no upper
limit
Same data, different axes..
v=1, KE=1v=2, KE=4v=3, KE=9
• More than that the graph is skewed because the x-axis has units of energy not velocity.
Why is the graph skewed?
Maxwell Boltzmann Distributions
velocity
Fraction of molecules
Kinetic energy
Molecules with “most probable speed”
Area under curve total no. of molecules
No. of molecules with K.E. Ea rxn occurs!
Distribution of Kinetic Energy at temperature = T1
Maxwell Boltzmann Distributions
Maxwell Boltzmann DistributionsLudwig Boltzmann, building upon the work of Maxwell formalized the Theorem of the Equipartition of Energy.
When a system reaches thermal
equilibrium, all the energy will be equally shared
among all degrees of freedom.
That is: the average kinetic energy in the translational motion of a molecule should equal the average kinetic energy in its rotational motion.
I also looked at what happens to the
particles when the energy of the system decreases. This gave a new interpretation of
the Second Law to Thermodynamics.
Maxwell Boltzmann Distributions
The Second Law of
Thermodynamics?
When a system starts to fall apart, the atoms in the system become more
disordered and the entropy increases. This disorder can
be measured as the probability of that particular system. That is, it is defined as the number of ways the system can be assembled from its collection of atoms.
logS Wk
k – Known as Boltzmann’s constant (1.38x10-23 J/K)
W – probability that a particular arrangement will occur
Boltzmann created the field of Statistical Mechanics, a tool that where the properties of macroscopic bodies are predicted by the statistical behaviour of their microscopic parts.
Black Body Radiation
When an object is heated it releases energy in the form
of a broad spectrum of electromagnetic waves.
A black body is an ideal body which allows the whole of the incident radiation to pass into itself (without reflecting the energy) and absorbs within itself this whole incident radiation. This propety is valid for radiation corresponding to all wavelengths and to all angels of incidence. Therefore, the black body is an ideal absorber and emitter of radaition. The blackbody will then radiate at a wavelength that is related to its absolute temperature. One should picture a hot oven with an open door emitting radiation into its cooler surroundings or, if the surroundings are hotter, one pictures a cool oven with an open door taking in radiation from its surroundings. It is the open oven door, which is meant to look black—and hence absorbs all colours or frequencies. This gives rise to the term black body.
Max Planck
Black Body Radiation
When measurements
were made of the radiation leaving
the opening of the oven, it was
discovered that the intensity (or
brightness) of the radiation leaving
the oven corresponded to
the Wavelength of the radiation.
We noticed that the dominant
wavelength (the highest peak on the
curve) shifts to a lower wavelength
(or higher frequency) when the temperature
increases.
Black Body Radiation
This means that in ideal conditions,
the radiation depends only on the temperature.
So any substance (metal, glass, coal, you, me)
that is at a temperature of
4227 oC (4500K) will glow orange-yellow in colour
Black Body RadiationFraction of molecules
Kinetic energy
Hey, Max! Did you notice the shape of your graph looks very similar to the
shape of my graph
Then, maybe we can interpret the electromagnetic waves jostling
around inside the oven statistically like the way you did with the jostling
molecules inside a container.
But the predicted continual increase in radiated energy with frequency (dubbed the "ultraviolet catastrophe") did not happen.
The theory predicted that the amount of radiation emitted in a given frequency range should be proportional to the number of modes in that range.
Nature knew better!
When my colleagues tried this they came up with an intensity equation, that agreed well at the large wavelengths (low frequencies) , but at shorter wavelengths the intensity went
off the scale so that it predicted an infinite intensity at the ultraviolet or higher region of
the spectrum.
Black Body RadiationPredicted by
Theory
Observed in Nature
Black Body Radiation
What went wrong?
The Rayleigh-Jeans model certainly did not match the
data.
Yes, the model says if you
opened the oven to look inside you
would be vapourized buy a
UV blast.
The Rayleigh-Jeans model applied the statistical model to
waves, rather than the particles that were used in
Maxwell’s model. You can fit a infinite number of waves at higher and higher frequency into a container. This lead to
the model being used incorrectly.
You are right, the amount of radiation predicted by the theory would be unlimited,
and as the temperature rose the intensity would even
increase. “Is it hot in here?”
This blackbody problem intrigued me. I looked at the data collected by numerous scientists. I came to the
conclusion that what ever the proper formula is, it should only
contain temperature and radiation frequency (or wavelength), plus a
universal constant or two.
Planck introduced the idea of electric oscillators inside the cavity along with the notion that all possible frequencies being present.
I also expected the average frequency to increase when the
temperature of the oven increased as the hotter walls caused these
electric oscillators to vibrate faster and faster until thermal equilibrium
was achieved.
Planck compared the data with another theory predicted by his friend Wien (which better matched the data) and tried to consolidated them both.
Black Body Radiation
Black Body Radiation
I looked at Wien’s formula and included
the requirement of the inclusion of all frequencies.
Then what happened
EurekaSuccessSuccessI Did itI Did it
The graph fits the experimental data exactly. I don’t know what it means,
but boy am I happy.
c1 and c2 where constants chosen by Planck to make the equation fit the experiments.
Black Body Radiation2
51
1c f
T
c fE
e
But, why doe this work?
Planck ended up rejecting a classical approach and followed Boltzmann's statistical approach .
To calculate the probabilities at various arrangements, Planck divided the energy of the oscillators into finite chunks.
So the total energy was written as E=ne (where e is arbitrarily small amount of energy) in which e=hf where h is some small constant and f is the frequency.
That’s it. The small energy packets DID NOT GO TO
ZERO, They came in quantum chunks given by e=hf
0.000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 006 626h
Energy is Discontinuous
I had no reason whatsoever to propose this, but I accepted it. It is not possible for an absorber to absorb or emit energy in a continuous range, but rather it must absorb or emit in discontinuous chunk called Quanta
n=1
n=3
n=4
n=5
n=6
n=2
21 43 65 7 9 108 11
E=
nhf
We can now see why the classical theory failed in the high frequency region of the black body curve. Here
the energy quanta are so large that only a few energy modes are excited, thus the radiation emitted drops to
zero and no ultraviolet catastrophe occurs.
Frequency
There are more modes available at lower frequencies to absorb or emit the correct energy packet. This way we don’t turn into a charcoal briquette when looking at
an open fire.
Black Body Radiation
Blackbody Radiation:First evidence for Q.M.
Max Planck found he could explain these curves if he assumed that electromagnetic energy was radiated in discrete chunks, rather than continuously.
The “quanta” of electromagnetic energy is called the photon.
Energy carried by a single photon is
E = hf = hc/
Planck’s constant: h = 6.626 X 10-34 Joule sec
E = nhf, n=1, 2, 3, 4
QuestionsA series of light bulbs are glowing red, yellow, and blue.Which bulb emits photons with the most energy?
The least energy?
Which is hotter?
(1) stove burner glowing red
(2) stove burner glowing orange
Blue! Lowest wavelength is highest energy.
E = hf = hc/l
Red! Highest wavelength is lowest energy.
Hotter stove emits higher-energy photons(shorter wavelength = orange)
Colored Light
Which coloured bulb’s filament is hottest?1) Red
2) Green
3) Blue
4) Same
Coloured bulbs are identical on the inside – the glass is tinted to absorb all of the light, except the color you see.
max
Visible Light
Photon
A red and green laser are each rated at 2.5mW. Which one produces more photons/second?
1) Red 2) Green 3) Same
Red light has less energy/photon so if they both have the same total energy, red has to have more photons!
# photons Energy/second
second Energy/photon
Power
Energy/photon Power
hf
Wein‘s Law
Wein Displacement Law
- It tells us as we heat an object up, its color changes from red to orange to white hot.
- You can use this to calculate the temperature of stars.
The surface temperature of the Sun is 5778 K, this temperature corresponds to a peak emission = 502 nm = about 5000 Å.
T
bmax
Wien’s Displacement Law(nice to know)
To calculate the peak wavelength produced at any particular temperature, use Wien’s Displacement Law:
T · peak = 0.2898*10-2 m·K
temperature in Kelvin!
The Wave – Particle Duality
OR
Light Waves
Until about 1900, the classical wave theory of light describedmost observed phenomenon.
Until about 1900, the classical wave theory of light describedmost observed phenomenon.
Light waves:
Characterized by:
Amplitude (A) Frequency (n) Wavelength (l)
Energy of wave is a A2
Waves or Particles ?
Ball, Car, cow, or point like objects called particles. They can be located at a location at a given time.They can be at rest, moving or accelerating.
Falling Ball
Ground level
Physical Objects:
Waves or Particles ?
Ripples, surf, ocean waves, sound waves, radio waves.
Need to see crests and troughs to define them.
Waves are oscillations in space and time.
Direction of travel, velocity
Up-downoscillations
Wavelength ,frequency, velocity and amplitude defines waves
Common types of waves:
Particles and Waves: Basic difference in behaviour
When particles collide they cannot pass through each other ! They can bounce or they can shatter
Waves and Particles Basic difference:
Waves can pass through each other !
As they pass through each other they can enhance or canceleach other
Later they regain their original form !
And then there was a problem…
In the early 20th century, several effects were observed which could not be understood using the wave theory of light.
Two of the more influential observations were:
1) The Photo-Electric Effect
2) The Compton Effect
Photoelectric Effect Electrons are attracted to the (positively charged) nucleus by
theelectrical force
In metals, the outermost electrons are not tightly bound, and canbe easily “liberated” from the shackles of its atom.
It just takes sufficient energy…Classically, we increase the energyof an EM wave by increasing theintensity (e.g. brightness)
Energy a A2
But this doesn’t work ??
PhotoElectric Effect
An alternate view is that light is acting like a particle
The light particle must have sufficient energy to “free” theelectron from the atom.
Increasing the Intensity is simply increasing the numberof light particles, but its NOT increasing the energy of each one!
Increasing the Intensity does diddly-squat!
However, if the energy of these “light particle” is related to their
frequency, this would explain why higher frequency light canknock the electrons out of their atoms, but low frequency light cannot…
Nobel Trivia
For which work did Einstein receive the Nobel Prize?
1) Special Relativity E = mc2
2) General Relativity Gravity bends Light
3) Photoelectric Effect Photons
4) Einstein didn’t receive a Nobel prize.
Photoelectric Effect
Light shining on a metal can “knock” electrons out of atoms.
Light must provide energy to overcome Coulomb attraction of electron to nucleus
The Apparatus
When the emission of photoelectrons from the cathode occurs, they travel across the vacuum tube toward the anode, due to the applied potential. Even when the variable potential is dropped to zero, the current does not drop to zero, because the kinetic energy of the electrons is still adequate enough to allow some to cross the gas (thus creating a current).
If we make the variable source of electrical potential negative then this has the effect of reducing the electron flow. If the anode is made more negative, relative to the cathode, a potential difference, the cutoff potential, V0, is reached when the electrons are all turned back.
The cutoff potential corresponds to the maximum kinetic energy of the photoelectrons. They do not have the KE to make it across the gap.
Classical physics prediction Electrons can be emitted regardless of the incident frequency, though it
will take longer time for smaller incident wave amplitude.
There should be a time delay between the wave illumination and the emission of electrons.
The higher the wave intensity, the higher electron energy, and thus the higher the stopping voltage.
1
f
Modern physics explanation The electromagnetic wave consists of many lumped energy
particles called photons.
The energy of each individual photon is given by the Joule
hfE
Modern physics explanation
If N is the total number of photons incident during time interval T, then the total incident optical energy in Joules is:
The incident energy per second (power) is given by:
n=N/T is the number of incident photons per second.
E Nhf
NP hf
T Watt = J/Sec.
Modern physics explanation
Interaction (absorption / emission) between the electromagnetic wave and matter occurs through annihilation/creation of a quantized energy (photon).
In the photoelectric effect, each single absorbed photon gives its total energy (hf) to one single electron.
This energy is used by the electron to: Overcome the attraction force of the material. Gain kinetic energy when freed from the material.
Modern physics explanation Work function (): It is the minimum energy required by an
electron to be free from the attraction force of the metal ions.
Some of the electrons may need more energy than the work function to be freed.
Total Energy
Zero
-ve
+ve
The most energetic electrons in the material
Modern physics explanation
Total Energy
Zero
-ve
+ve
The most energetic electrons in the material
hf
hf
Modern physics explanation
Total Energy
Zero
-ve
+ve
The most energetic electron outside the material
2maxmv
2
1hf
hf
Modern physics explanation
The electrons that need only the work function to be freed, will have the greatest kinetic energy outside the metal.
The electrons requiring higher energy to be freed, will have lower kinetic energy.
2max
1
2hf mv
Modern physics explanation
Thus, there is a minimum required photon energy (hfo) to overcome the work function of the material (note f0 is called the cutoff frequency).
If the incident photon energy is less than the work function, the electron will not be freed from the surface, and no photoelectric effect will be observed.
ohf
=No photoelectric
current
If hf<
If f< fo
Modern physics explanation
The most energetic electrons are stopped by the reverse biased stopping potential Vo.
o2max eVmv
2
1
maxK hf
Modern physics explanation
The stopping potential doesn’t depend on the incident light intensity.
The stopping potential depends on the incident frequency.
oo ffheV
oo hfeVhf
2maxmv
2
1hf
o o
hV f f
e
Slope = h/e
Photoelectric Equation
Since the cutoff potential is related to the maximum kinetic energy with which the photoelectrons are emitted: for a photoelectron of charge e and kinetic energy Ek, and retarding potential V0. Then we have (loss is KE = gain in PE) : Ek=eV0.
Ephoton(hf)=Φ+Ek (Φ, the work function, is energy with which the electron is bound to the surface, Ek is the kinetic energy of the ejected photoelectron)
Ek=hf-Φ : This tells us that if f is small such that hf=Φ, no electrons will be ejected.
Threshold Frequency Photoelectrons are emitted from the
photoelectric surface when the incident light is above a certain frequency f0, called the threshold frequency. Above the threshold frequency, the more intense the light, the greater the current of photoelectrons
Threshold frequencyThe intensity (brightness) of the light
has no effect on the threshold frequency. No matter how intense the incident light, if it is below the threshold frequency, not a single photoelectron is emitted.
Photoelectric Effect SummaryEach metal has “Work Function” (Φ) which is
the minimum energy needed to free electron from atom.
Light comes in packets called PhotonsE = h f h=6.626 X 10-34 Joule sec
Maximum kinetic energy of released electrons K.E. = hf – Φ
Photoelectrons are emitted from the photoelectric surface when the incident light is above a certain frequency f0, called the threshold frequency.
Vary wavelength, fixed amplitude
electrons emitted ?
What if we try this ?
Photoelectric Effect (Summary)
No electrons were emitted until the frequency of the light exceeded a critical frequency, at which point electrons were emitted from the surface! (Recall: small l large n)
No
Yes, withlow KE
Yes, withhigh KE
Increase energy by increasing amplitude
“Classical” Method
electrons emitted ?
No
No
No
No
Another symbol for frequency
Photo-Electric Effect (Summary)
“Light particle”
Before Collision After Collision
In this “quantum-mechanical” picture, the energy of the light particle (photon) must overcome the binding energy (work function, Φ) of the electron to the nucleus.
If the energy of the photon does exceed the binding energy, theelectron is emitted with a KE = Ephoton – Ebinding.
The energy of the photon is given by E=hn, where the constant h = 6.6x10-34 [J s] is Planck’s constant.
SummaryIf light is under your control: You can set the frequency (wavelength, colour) and intensity. Your apparatus can count any ejected electrons. You create a higher potential relative to the metal plate, then the ejected electrons will be pulled into the collector and forced into the ammeter circuit. If you are interested in the energy of the ejected electrons, you would make the potential of the collector for and more negative with respect to the surface and eventually you will reach a voltage level where the ejected electrons can no longer reach the collector. This potential is called the Stopping potential, Vo. The maximum kinetic energy of the ejected electrons will then be:
0electronKE qV
By the definition of the eV, the Stopping Potential expressed in volts will have the same numerical value as the electron energy expressed in eV. That is a Stopping Potential of 2.7 V implies a maximum electron energy of 2.7 eV
SummaryHow does this explain the photoelectric effect? For our metal with 2.7 eV work function, then a single photon would need an energy of 2.7 eV to eject an electron. If you used red light (650 nm), then the photons in the beam would have energy
34 8
199
6.63 10 3 103.06 10 1.91
650 10photon
hcE hf eV
These photons will be absorbed, but they do not have enough energy to eject electrons.
1eV=1.60x10-19J
Curve for material 2
Curve for material 1
Slope= Planck’s constant, h
fo (material 2)
fo (material 1)
Φ (material 1)
Φ (material 2)
Frequency (Hz)
Energy (eV)
Often the photoelectric equation is illustrated on a graph of KE vs frequency. On this graph, the slope ALWAYS equals Planck's constant, 6.63 x 10-34 J sec. It NEVER changes. All lines on this type of graph will be parallel, only differing in their y-axis intercept (-f) and their x-axis intercept (the threshold frequency).
The threshold frequency is the lowest frequency, or longest wavelength, that permits photoelectrons to be ejected from the surface. At this frequency the photoelectrons have no extra KE (KE = 0) resulting in
0 = hf – Φ hf =Φ Ephoton =Φ
Note that red light has such a low frequency (energy) that it will never eject photoelectrons - that is, the energy of a red photon is less than the work function of the metal.
If suitable light is allowed to fall on plate 'P', it will give out photo electrons as shown in the figure. The photo electrons are attracted by the collector 'C' connected to the +ve terminal of a battery. The glass tube is evacuated. When the collector 'C' is kept at +ve potential, the photo electrons are attracted by it and a current flows in the circuit which is indicated by the galvanometer.
Threshold frequency is defined as the minimum frequency of incident light which can cause photo electric emission i.e. this frequency is just able to eject electrons with out giving them additional energy. It is denoted by f0.
The Minimum amount of energy which is necessary to start photo electric emission is called Work Function. If the amount of energy of incident radiation is less than the work function of metal, no photo electrons are emitted.It is denoted by Φ. Work function of a material is given by Φ=hf0.It is a property of material. Different materials have different values of work function.
The negative potential of the plate 'C' at which the photo electric current becomes zero is called Stopping Potential or cut-off potential. Stopping potential is that value of retarding potential difference between two plates which is just sufficient to halt the most energetic photo electrons emitted.It is denoted by "Vo"
Review
What happens to the rate electrons are emitted when increase the brightness? more photons/sec so more electrons are emitted.
Rate goes up.
What happens to max kinetic energy when increase brightness? no change: each photon carries the same energy as
long as we don’t change the color of the light
Question
Photoelectric Effect: Light Frequency What happens to rate electrons are emitted
when increase the frequency of the light? as long the number of photons/sec doesn’t change,
the rate won’t change.
What happens to max kinetic energy when increase the frequency of the light? each photon carries more energy, so each electron
receives more energy.
QuestionWhich drawing of the atom is more correct?
This is a drawing of an electron’s p-orbital probability distribution. At which location is the electron most likely to exist?
32
1
QuestionYou observe that for a certain metal surface illuminated with decreasing wavelengths of light, electrons are first ejected when the light has a wavelength of 550 nm.
a) Determine the work function for the material.b) Determine the Threshold Potential when light of wavelength
400 nm is incident on the surface
QuestionYou observe that for a certain metal surface illuminated with decreasing wavelengths of light, electrons are first ejected when the light has a wavelength of 550 nm.
a) Determine the work function for the material.
hc
34 8
9
19
6.63 10 3 10
550 10
3.62 10
2.25
mJ s
sm
J
eV
It is quicker is we use hc=1240eV nm
1240
5502.25
hc
eV nm
nmeV
QuestionYou observe that for a certain metal surface illuminated with decreasing wavelengths of light, electrons are first ejected when the light has a wavelength of 550 nm.
b) Determine the Threshold Potential when light of wavelength 400 nm is incident on the surface
12402.25
4000.85
photons
hc
eV nme
K
Vnm
e
E E
V
QuestionSuppose you find that the electric potential needed to shut down a photoelectric current is 3 volts. What is the maximum kinetic energy of the photoelectrons.
The given potential is the stopping potential V0
19
19
1.6 10 3
4.8 10
3
o
C V
eV
q
J
U V
This is the maximum kinetic energy of the photoelectron
QuestionIf the work function of the material is known to be 2eV, what is the cut-off frequency of the photons for this material.
The cutt-off frequency is the frequency above which electrons can be freed from the material. That is, the frequency of radiation whose energy is equal to the work function
15
14
2
4.14 10
4.83 10
c
cE hf
fh
eV
eV s
Hz
19
34
14
2 1.6 10
6.63 10
4.83 10
c
c
E hf
fh
J
J s
Hz
or
So is light a wave or a particle ?
On macroscopic scales, we can treat a large number of photonsas a wave.
When dealing with subatomic phenomenon, we are often dealingwith a single photon, or a few. In this case, you cannot usethe wave description of light. It doesn’t work !
Is Light a Wave or a Particle?Wave
Electric and Magnetic fields act like wavesSuperposition, Interference and Diffraction
ParticlePhotonsCollision with electrons in photo-electric effect
Both Particle and Wave !
Are Electrons Particles or Waves?
Particles, definitely particles.You can “see them”.You can “bounce” things off them.You can put them on an electroscope.
How would know if electron was a wave?
Look for interference!
Young’s Double Slit w/ electron
Screen a distance L from slits
Source of monoenergetic electrons
d
2 slits-separated by d
L
Electrons are Waves?
Electrons produce interference pattern just like light waves.Need electrons to go through both slits.What if we send 1 electron at a time?Does a single electron go through both
slits?
Electrons are Particles
If we shine a bright light, we can ‘see’ which hole the electron goes through.
(1) Both Slits (2) Only 1 Slit
But now the interference is gone!
Electrons are Particles and Waves!
Depending on the experiment electron can behave like wave (interference) particle (localized mass and charge)
If we don’t look, electron goes through both slits. If we do look it chooses 1.
Electrons are Particles and Waves!
Depending on the experiment electron can behave like wave (interference) particle (localized mass and charge)
If we don’t look, electron goes through both slits. If we do look it chooses 1.
I’m not kidding it’s true!
Schroedinger’s Cat
Place cat in box with some poison. If we don’t look at the cat it will be both dead and alive!
Poison
HereKitty, Kitty!
Momentum of a Photon
Compton found that the conservation of momentum did hold for X-ray scattering collisions at an angle (Compton effect)
2
p mv
Ep v
c
E
chf
chf
f
h
The Compton Effect
In 1924, A. H. Compton performed an experiment where X-rays impinged on matter, and he measured the scattered radiation.
Problem: According to the wave picture of light, the incident X-ray gives up energy to the electron, and emerges with a lower energy (ie., the amplitude is lower), but must have l2=l1.
MATTER
Incident X-raywavelength
l1 l2 > l1
Scattered X-raywavelength
l2e
Electron comes flying out
Louis de Broglie
Quantum Picture to the RescueIf we treat the X-ray as a particle with zero mass, and momentum p = E / c, everything works !
Incident X-rayp1 = h / l1
e
Electroninitially at
rest
l2 > l1
Scattered X-rayp2 = h / l2
e
pe
e
Compton found that if the photon was treated like a particle with mometum p=E/c, he could fully account for the energy & momentum (direction also) of the scattered electron and photon! Just as if 2 billiard balls colliding!
Compton Scattering (nice to know) Compton assumed the
photons acted like other particles in collisions
Energy and momentum were conserved
The shift in wavelength is
(1 cos )oe
h
m c
Compton wavelength
DeBroglie’s Relation
The smaller the wavelength the larger the photon’s momentum!
The energy of a photon is simply related to the momentum by:
E = pc (or, p = E / c )
The wavelength is related to the momentum by: l = h/p
The photon has momentum, and its momentum is given by simply p = h / l.
p = h / l
Quantum Summary
Particles act as waves and waves act as particles
Physics is NOT deterministic
Observations affect the experiment
Four QuantumParadoxes
Paradox 1 (non-locality):Einstein’s Bubble
Paradox 1 (non-locality):Einstein’s Bubble
Situation: A photon is emitted from an isotropic source.
Paradox 1 (non-locality):Einstein’s Bubble
Paradox 1 (non-locality):Einstein’s Bubble
Situation: A photon is emitted from an isotropic source. Its spherical wave function Y expands like an inflating bubble.
Paradox 1 (non-locality):Einstein’s Bubble
Paradox 1 (non-locality):Einstein’s Bubble
Question (Albert Einstein):
If a photon is detected at Detector A, how does the photon’s wave function Y at the location of Detectors B & C know that it should vanish?
Situation: A photon is emitted from an isotropic source. Its spherical wave function Y expands like an inflating bubble.
It is as if one throws a beer bottle into Lake Ontario. It disappears, and its quantum ripples spread all over the Atlantic.
Then in Copenhagen, the beer bottle suddenly jumps onto the dock, and the ripples disappear everywhere else.
That’s what quantum mechanics says happens to electrons and photons when they move from place to place.
Paradox 1 (non-locality):Einstein’s Bubble
Paradox 1 (non-locality):Einstein’s Bubble
Experiment: A cat is placed in a sealed box containing a device that has a 50% chance of killing the cat.
Question 1: What is the wave function of the cat just before the box is opened?
When does the wave function collapse?
Paradox 2 (Y collapse):Schrödinger’s Cat
Paradox 2 (Y collapse):Schrödinger’s Cat
1 1
2 2( dead + alive ?)
Question 2: If we observe Schrödinger, what is his wave function during the experiment? When does it collapse?
The question is, when and how does the wave function collapse.• What event
collapses it?• How does the
collapse spread to remote locations?
Paradox 3 (wave vs. particle):Wheeler’s Delayed Choice
Paradox 3 (wave vs. particle):Wheeler’s Delayed Choice
A source emits one photon.Its wave function passesthrough slits 1 and 2, makinginterference beyond the slits.
The observer can choose to either:(a) measure the interference pattern at plane s1, requiring that the photon travels through both slits.
or(b) measure at plane s2 which slit image it appears in, indicating thatit has passed only through slit 2.
The observer waits until after the photon has passed the slits to decide which measurement to do.
***
Thus, the photon does notdecide if it is a particle or awave until after it passesthe slits, even though a particlemust pass through only one slit and a wave must pass through both slits.
Apparently the measurement choice determines whether the photon is a particle or a wave retroactively!
Paradox 3 (wave vs. particle):
Wheeler’s Delayed Choice
Paradox 3 (wave vs. particle):
Wheeler’s Delayed Choice
Paradox 4 (non-locality):EPR ExperimentsMalus and Furry
Paradox 4 (non-locality):EPR ExperimentsMalus and Furry
An EPR (einstein Poldalsky Rosen) Experiment measures the correlated polarizations of a pairof entangled photons, obeyingMalus’ Law [P(qrel) = Cos2qrel]
Paradox 4 (non-locality):EPR ExperimentsMalus and Furry
Paradox 4 (non-locality):EPR ExperimentsMalus and Furry
An EPR Experiment measures the correlated polarizations of a pairof entangled photons, obeyingMalus’ Law [P(qrel) = Cos2qrel]
The measurement gives the same resultas if both filters were in the same arm.
Paradox 4 (non-locality):EPR ExperimentsMalus and Furry
Paradox 4 (non-locality):EPR ExperimentsMalus and Furry
An EPR Experiment measures the correlated polarizations of a pairof entangled photons, obeyingMalus’ Law [P(qrel) = Cos2qrel]
The measurement gives the same resultas if both filters were in the same arm.
Furry proposed to place both photons inthe same random polarization state.This gives a different and weaker correlation.
Paradox 4 (non-locality):EPR ExperimentsMalus and Furry
Paradox 4 (non-locality):EPR ExperimentsMalus and Furry
Apparently, the measurement on the right side of the apparatus causes (in some sense of the word cause) the photon on the left side to be in the same quantum mechanical state, and this does not happen until well after they have left the source.
This EPR “influence across space time” works even if the measurements are light years apart.
Could that be used for FTL signaling? Sorry, SF fans, the answer is No!
FourInterpretation
sof Quantum Mechanics
Scientists who subscribe to the Collapse interpretation make a choice. They believe that when you accept the electron’s wave nature, you must give up on the electron’s particle nature.In this interpretation, the electron leaves the source as a particle that is governed by one set of laws, but then “expands” into a spread-out wave as it passes through the slits. The electron is now governed by new laws. However, before we can measure this wavy, spread-out quantum electron it “collapses” back into a particle and arrives at only one of the many possible places on the screen.
The consequence of choosing the Collapse interpretation line of thinking is that you must accept that an electron physically changes from particle to wave and back again. These two realities, including the laws that describe them, alternate uncontrollably
The Collapse InterpretationThe Collapse
Interpretation
The Pilot Wave interpretation avoids this unexplained collapse altogether. Scientists who subscribe to this interpretation choose to believe that the electron always exists as a classical particle and is only ever governed by one kind of physical law, for both the familiar classical as well as quantum phenomena. However, to account for the electron’s wave behaviour this description requires the introduction of an invisible guiding wave. In this interpretation, wave-particle duality is explained by assuming that electrons are real particles all of the time, and are guided by an invisible wave. The electron’s wave nature is attributed to this abstract wave, called a Pilot Wave, which tells the electron how to move. To obtain the interference pattern in the double-slit experiment, this wave must be everywhere and know about everything in the universe, including what conditions will exist in the future. For example, it knows if one or two slits are open, or if a detector is hiding behind the slits.
The Pilot Wave interpretation embodies all of the quantum behaviour, including all the interactions between classical objects like the electron, the two-slit barrier, and the measuring devices. In contrast to the Collapse interpretation where the collapsing electron wave was considered real, in the Pilot Wave interpretation the wave is an abstract mathematical tool. This interpretation has a consequence. The Pilot Wave interpretation, which was invented to deal with an electron as a real physical object, suffers the fate of being permanently beyond detection
The Pilot Wave InterpretationThe Pilot Wave Interpretation
The Many-Worlds Interpretation
The Many-Worlds Interpretation
Supporters of the Many Worlds interpretation, similar to the Pilot Wave idea, choose to accept that electrons are classical particles. Then they go even further, demanding that all elements of the theory must correspond to real objects—unlike the collapsing electron or the Pilot Wave. Supporters insist on only measurable, physical objects within the world. This world is constantly splitting into many copies of itself.
When electrons demonstrate wave behaviour they exist in a superposition of many different states. To Many Worlds supporters, who maintain the idea of an electron as a classical particle, a parallel universe must exist for each of the electron’s possible states. When the electron reaches the slits, it has to choose which slit to go through. At that moment, the entire universe splits into two. In one universe, the electron passes through the left slit as a real particle. In the other universe it passes through the right slit as a real particle. The consequence of accepting the Many Worlds interpretation, with many quantum particles constantly facing similar choices, is the requirement that our universe must be constantly splitting into an almost infinite number of parallel universes, each having its own copy of every one of us
The Copenhagen Interpretation
The Copenhagen Interpretation
Advocates of the Copenhagen interpretation choose to limit their discussion directly to the experiment and to the measurements on physical objects. Questions are restricted to what can be seen and to what we actually do. They try to think about experiments in a very honest way, without invoking extra theoretical ideas like the on-off switching of the Collapse idea, or the guidance supplied by the invisible Pilot Wave, or the proposed splitting into Many Worlds.
It is tempting to come up with mental pictures about what is happening that go beyond the results of an experiment, and to try to interpret what is happening by means of those hidden theoretical mechanisms. The previous interpretations attributed the mysterious wave–particle duality to imaginative mathematics. In the Copenhagen interpretation much of this mystery is attributed to what happens when an experimenter enters the lab and interacts with the quantum mechanical system. With the Copenhagen perspective, the mathematics only deals with the experimenter’s information about measurement interactions with the quantum mechanical system.
The consequence of accepting the Copenhagen interpretation is a fundamental restriction on how much you can read into experimental results. We know that electrons are particles when they are fired from the source, and we know that they are particles when they hit the screen. What happens to electrons in the middle, what they are “doing”, or what they really “are” is not possible to know. In the Copenhagen interpretation these are unfounded questions. We may call an electron a wave or a particle, but ultimately those names are no more than suitable models.
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