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photons (1 Viewer)

clever angel

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hi again

another q'n

a beam of light falls onto a balck body and imaprts 0.10 mW of power onto it. wavelenght of light is 5 * 10^-7 m

calcualte frequency and the energy per photon of light. this is pretty easy
but i don't know how to do the next bit

calculate the number of photons per second striking the body ? is it just dividing energy by power

thankxxx
 

香港!

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^
Frequency, f=1\T where T is the 'period' in seconds
Maybe you can use that
 

jake2.0

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use the fact that power = energy/time, you already know the energy of one photon
 

香港!

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hihi, I did it an alternative way instaed of using f=1\T
I got E=....
P=W\t=E\t
t=E\P
then i got t=3.9756 x 10^-24

but this answer was different to my T in the other way???
Maybe the f=1\T way is inappropriate?
or I made a mistake????
 

香港!

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yeah, we found f
so i use f=1\T, T=1\f
but it turned out to be wrong...
so what's happening???
 

香港!

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^ yes i did dat
but i'm also interested to see why T=1\f answer is different hehehe
 

Antwan23q

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i dont get it, are u tryin to find the time?

the question says to find the amount of photons on it per second
 

jake2.0

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香港! said:
^ yes i did dat
but i'm also interested to see why T=1\f answer is different hehehe
i don't really know, maybe because T and t are not the same :confused:
 

KFunk

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Captain Gh3y said:
Is that right now?
Sounds good to me. I'd just get f using f = c/wavelength.

Then E(per photon) = hf = energy/photon

P/hf = (Energy/Second) x (Photon/energy) = Photons per second
 

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