Yellow light of wavelength 585 nm falls on a photocathode whose threshold frequency is
4.10 x 1014 Hz. What is the maximum speed of ejected electrons? What happens to the speed
of electrons when the intensity of the yellow light increases? Why?
Thought
Calculating energy dynamics
I’m working through the photoelectric effect to determine the maximum speed of ejected electrons using the standard formula for kinetic energy, considering threshold frequency and intensity impacts.
Calculating frequency
I’m determining the frequency of yellow light with a wavelength of 585 nm, using the speed of light equation. This involves dividing the speed of light by the wavelength.
Calculating energy
First, I determined the frequency difference between the incident light and the threshold frequency, then multiplied this by Planck's constant to find the energy difference in joules.
Converting and calculating
I'm converting the energy to eV and applying the kinetic energy formula to find the electron's maximum speed using its mass. This involves careful multiplication and square root operations.
Calculating precision
I’m working through the square root of [1.5 x 10^11], carefully multiplying terms and estimating to approximate the electron's maximum speed, which is around 3.88 x 10^5 m/s.
Confirming the result
I determined the maximum electron speed to be around 3.9 x 10^5 m/s. Intensifying the light increases ejected electrons but doesn't alter their speed.
Calculating energy difference
I’m calculating the energy difference between the incident light and the threshold frequency in eV, ensuring the precision of the multiplication and exponent calculation to confirm the correct energy value.
Confirming energy consistency
I verified the energy difference in eV by converting from Joules, ensuring the calculated kinetic energy of 0.426 eV aligns with the expected value.
Thought about photoelectric effect,持续 44 秒
Answer
First, let us outline the steps to solve for the maximum speed of the photoelectrons. Then we will discuss what happens when the light’s intensity changes.
1. Given Information
Wavelength of incident (yellow) light, λ=585nm=5.85×10−7m.
Threshold frequency of the photocathode, f__{0} = 4.10 \times 10^{14}\,\text{Hz}.
Speed of light, c=3.00×108m/s.
Planck’s constant, h=6.626×10−34J⋅s.
Electron mass, me=9.109×10−31kg.
2. Find the Frequency of the Incident Light
The frequency f of light of wavelength λ is
f=λc.
Substitute the values:
f=5.85×10−7m3.00×108m/s≈5.13×1014Hz.
3. Calculate the Photon Energy Above the Threshold
Photon energy of the incident light:
Ephoton=hf=(6.626×10−34J⋅s)(5.13×1014Hz)≈3.40×10−19J.
Work function (ϕ) corresponds to the threshold frequency f0:
ϕ=hf0=(6.626×10−34)(4.10×1014)≈2.71×10−19J.
Maximum kinetic energy of ejected electrons is the difference between the photon energy and the work function:
Kmax=Ephoton−ϕ=3.40×10−19J−2.71×10−19J=0.69×10−19J.
(Depending on rounding, you may see slightly different numbers; below we will show another more direct approach using the difference in frequency.)
Alternative direct approach (using f−f0 )
Often, we directly compute the energy difference via:
Depending on the precise rounding and intermediate steps, this yields a kinetic energy around 6.8×10−20J, which is about 0.426eV.
4. Find the Maximum Speed of the Ejected Electrons
From classical kinetic energy,
Kmax=21mevmax2⟹vmax=me2Kmax.
Using Kmax≈6.82×10−20J and me=9.109×10−31kg:
Compute the numerator:
2Kmax≈2×6.82×10−20=1.36×10−19J.
Divide by the electron mass:
9.109×10−311.36×10−19≈1.49×1011.
Take the square root:
vmax=1.49×1011≈3.86×105m/s.
Depending on rounding, you will often see vmax≈3.8×105m/s.
5. What Happens to the Electron Speed if the Light Intensity Increases?
Key idea: The maximum kinetic energy (and thus speed) of the electrons depends on the frequency (or color) of the light, not on its intensity.
If you increase the intensity but keep the same wavelength (585 nm), you are increasing the number of photons hitting the surface per second, but not their individual energy.
Since the individual photon energy (determined by frequency ν) stays the same, the excess energy above the work function stays the same, which means the speed of each ejected electron does not increase.
What does increase with higher intensity at the same wavelength is the rate at which electrons are ejected (i.e., a greater photocurrent), but their maximum speed remains the same.
Final Answers
Maximum speed of the ejected electrons:
vmax≈3.8×105m/s.
Effect of increasing intensity:
The maximum speed of the electrons does not change because it depends on the frequency (color) of the light, not on the intensity.
Increasing the intensity at the same wavelength merely increases the number of electrons ejected, but each electron’s kinetic energy (and hence speed) stays the same.
Question
check your last step, you might have done the square root wrong
Thought
Reviewing calculations
I’m re-evaluating the square root of 1.49 x 10^11 by approximating √1.49 and √10^11, then multiplying the results to ensure the final value accurately reflects the original step's conclusion.
Confirming calculations
I’m verifying the division of 1.36 x 10^-19 by 9.109 x 10^-31 to ensure it equals 1.49 x 10^11, then recalculating the square root, leading to 3.86 x 10^5.
Revisiting square roots
OK, let me see. Revisiting the square root calculation for 1.49 x 10^11 yields a more precise 3.87 x 10^5, confirming the boundary value for 2Kmax/m_e.
Calculating with precision
I'm calculating the boundary value for the final velocity step by step, ensuring precision in each calculation. This confirms the boundary value for the final velocity is 3.87 x 10^5 m/s.
Reassessing the calculation
Rounding to 3.9 x 10^5 m/s, longhand verification, and using exact Kmax for precision. Consistency is key.
Verifying precision
I'm making sure the final velocity is accurate by calculating each step carefully, confirming it aligns with the initial calculation, and rounding off to 3.9 x 10^5 m/s for clarity.
Thought about calculating electron speed,持续 17 秒
Answer
Let’s do the final step with careful attention to the arithmetic. The potential concern is in taking the square root of the quantity me2Kmax.
Recap of the Key Quantities
Planck’s constant:
h=6.626×10−34J⋅s
Speed of light:
c=3.00×108m/s
Electron mass:
me=9.109×10−31kg
Threshold frequency:
f0=4.10×1014Hz
Incident wavelength:
λ=585nm=5.85×10−7m
so the incident frequency is
f=λc=5.85×10−73.00×108≈5.13×1014Hz.
1. Compute the Photon Energy and the Work Function
Depending on your rounding at each step, you may see 3.86×105, 3.87×105, or 3.9×105 m/s, but they are all essentially the same to 2–3 significant figures.
3. What If You Increase the Intensity of the Same Yellow Light?
Key fact: The kinetic energy (and thus maximum speed) of the emitted electrons depends on the frequency of the light, not on its intensity.
If you increase intensity (i.e., make the light brighter) but keep the same wavelength (585 nm), the energy per photon remains the same.
Because each electron’s maximum kinetic energy is still h(f−f0), the electron speed does not increase when intensity goes up.
Instead, you will emit more electrons per second (higher photocurrent), but each electron’s speed remains the same as long as the frequency remains at 5.13 × 10^14 Hz.
Final Answer
Maximum speed of the ejected electrons is about
vmax≈3.9×105 m/s.
If the intensity of the yellow light increases (but the color stays the same), the maximum speed of the electrons does not change. Their speed depends only on the photon frequency (i.e., the color), not on how many photons arrive per second. Increasing intensity increases the number of electrons ejected per second, but not their individual kinetic energies.