14
Office Hrs W 2:10-3:10 pm F after lecture [email protected] http://www.icecube.wisc.edu/~tmontaruli Chamberlin Hall - room 4112 Tel. +1-608-890-0901 This week: more on atom DC circuits Magnetic Fields and Induction EM waves Cosmology MTE3 25 April 1

Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

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Page 1: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

Office Hrs

• W 2:10-3:10 pm• F after lecture

[email protected]• http://www.icecube.wisc.edu/~tmontaruli• Chamberlin Hall - room 4112• Tel. +1-608-890-0901

• This week: more on atom• DC circuits• Magnetic Fields and Induction• EM waves• Cosmology• MTE3 25 April

1

Page 2: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

2

What’s your view of atoms?

These 2-3 lectures concern:Bohr atom, X-ray spectra, Frank&Hertz exp. (Ch 4 T&L)Schroedinger equation for H atom, Periodic table and Pauli exclusion principle (Ch 7 T&L)All in Ch 36 of T&M

Page 3: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

3

Hystory of Atoms• Thompson’s classical model (1897)• Problem: charges cannot be in equilibrium

Thin gold foil

α particlesPlanetary model

Positive charge concentrated in the nucleus (∼ 10-15 m)

Electrons orbit the nucleus (r~10-10 m)

Rutherford’s experiment (1911)

Problem1: emission and absorption at specific frequenciesProblem2: electrons on circular orbits radiate

Page 4: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

Emission and Absorption spectra

4http://jersey.uoregon.edu/vlab/elements/Elements.html

Emission spectra: produced by gases where the atom do not experience many collisions. Excited unbound atoms make transitions from excited states to lower levels emitting photonsAbsorption spectra: light crosses gas and atoms absorb at characteristic frequencies. Re-emitted light has different frequencies hence dark linesContinuum spectra: collisions broaden lines and individual lines are no more resolved

Page 5: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

5

Emitting and absorbing lightZero energy

n=1

n=2

n=3n=4

E1 = −13.612 eV

E2 = −13.622 eV

E3 = −13.632 eV

n=1

n=2

n=3n=4

E1 = −13.612 eV

E2 = −13.622 eV

E3 = −13.632 eV

Photon absorbed hf=E2-E1

Photon emittedhf=E2-E1

Page 6: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

6

Hydrogen spectra• Lyman Series of emission lines given by

Hydrogen

n=2,3,4,..

Use E=hc/λ

Lyman series

R = 1.096776 x 107 /m

For heavy atoms R∞ = 1.097373 x 107 /m

Rydberg-Ritz

Page 7: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

7

Bohr’s Model of Hydrogen Atom (1913)

Zero energy

n=1

n=2

n=3n=4

E1 = −13.612 eV

E2 = −13.622 eV

E3 = −13.632 eV

Ener

gy

axis

•Postulate 1: Electron moves in circular orbits where it does not radiate (stationary states)

•Postulate 2: radiation emitted in transitions between stationary states

Orbit radius: rn = n2 a0

En = −13.6n2 eV

•orbital angular momentum quantized L = mvr = n h/2π

Ei − E f = hν

Page 8: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

8

Quantization in physics

“correspondence principle” quantum mechanics must agree with classical results

when appropriate (large orbits and energies)

Incorporating wave nature of electron gives an intuitive understanding of ‘quantized orbits’

Page 9: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

9

Resonances of a string

Fundamental, wavelength 2L/1=2L, frequency f

1st harmonic, wavelength 2L/2=L, frequency 2f

2nd harmonic, wavelength 2L/3,frequency 3f

λ/2

λ/2

λ/2n=1

n=2

n=3

n=4

freq

uenc

y

. .

.

Vibrational modes equally spaced in frequency

λn =2Ln

Page 10: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

H atom question

Peter Flanary’s sculpture ‘Wave’ outside Chamberlin What quantum state of H?

10

Integer number of wavelengths around circumference.

L = pr = n h2π

⇒hλ

= n h2πr

⇒ 2πr = nλ

Page 11: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

Radius and Energy levels of H-atom

11

F = k Ze2

r2= m v 2

rmvr = nh

Total energy:

E =p2

2m−kZe2

r⇒ E = −

12k 2Z 2me4

n2h2= −13.6eV Z 2

n2

r = n2 h2

mkZe2

=

n2

Za0

This formula agrees to 6 significant digits. For better agreement we have to consider the ‘reduced mass’:

µ =m

1+ m /M

EK =p2

2m+

p2

2mN

=12p2 m + M

mM

=

p2

pe = pN = p

Page 12: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

X-ray spectra

• observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray tube

12

L(n=2)->K(n=1)

M(n=3)->K(n=1)

• When an electron is extracted from the inner shell and an outer electron fills the leftover vacant state, photons are emitted at specific frequencies

• Moseley measured for many elements

Page 13: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

X-ray spectra

ν = A(Z − b)

E2 − E1 = hν ⇒ −13.6eVZ 2

n21n2

−1

Page 14: Office Hrs - IceCube Neutrino Observatorytmontaruli/Phys248/lectures/lecture26.pdf · X-ray spectra • observed when bombarding target element with high energy electrons in an X-ray

Franck and Hertz experiment (1914)

14

4.9eV=E1-E0 6.7eV=E2-E0

electrons accelerated up to the energycorresponding to the energy difference between the n level and the fundamental level lose energy in inelastic collisionswith Hg atoms or there can be multipleinelastic collisions

V0