Problem statement
A photon of energy E0 head on with a free electron of rest mass m0 and speed v.
the photon is scattered at at 90 degrees.
find the energy E of the scattered photon.
attemtp at solution
the answer in the book is E=\frac{E_0(1+
\frac{v}{c})}{1+\frac{E_0}{E_i}}
where...
Homework Statement
In the compton effect a .150nm photon strikes a free staionary electron in a head-on elastic collision and knocks it into the foward direction. The rebounding photon recoils directly backwards. Use the collision conservation laws to find the final kinetic energy of the...
oK SO... I have been given the task of deriving the Compton effect equ. ( \lambda\prime-\lambda=\frac{h}{m_ec}(1-cos\theta))
exactly from the 3 following:
1) \frac{h}{\lambda}=\frac{h}{\lambda\prime}cos\theta +\gamma m u cos\phi
2) 0=\frac{h}{\lambda\prime}sin\theta-\gamma mu sin\phi...
Hi everyone,
Right now, I am working on a homework problem asking me to derive the Compton effect, which is given by \lambda\prime-\lambda=\frac{h}{m_ec}(1-cos\theta)
A diagram of the situation can be found here: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/quantum/compton.html#c1...
In the Compton effect, a 0.100nm photon strikes a free electron in a head-on collision and knocks it into the forward direction. The rebounding of the photon recoils it directly backward. Use conservation of (relativistic) energy and momentum to determine:
a) the kinetic energy of the electron...
How do I find the endpoint energy for photons when an .75 MeV electron beams stops inside a tungsten target? I just don't understand how to solve it without the scattering angle.:confused:
I have an odd problem here. I need to show that:
KE = \frac{{\frac{{\Delta \lambda }}{\lambda }}}{{1 + (\frac{{\Delta \lambda }}{\lambda })}}hf
I've basically derived KE = \frac{{hc}}{{\lambda _o }} - \frac{{hc}}{{\lambda '}} down to…
KE(\frac{{\lambda '}}{{\lambda _o ^2 }}) =...
why is it extremely dificult to observe the compton effect using visible light?
is it because visible light does not have a short enough wavelenght to excite the electrons?
for the following question:
for electromagnetic waves A of wavelength 10pm and electromagnetic waves B o f wavelengthh 20 pm, which produces more pronounced Compton effect?
my problem:
the question doesn't give the scattering angle or final wavelength, so isn't this question too ambiguous?
for the following question:
x-rays scattered by a crystal are assumed to undergo no change in wavelength. show that this assumption is reasonable by calculating the compton wavelength of a Na atom and comparing it with the typical x-ray wavelength of 0.1nm.
my problems:
1) why doesn't...
How can a photon knock an electron from a shell, entirely out of the atom?
(i.e PhotoElectric Effect)
Photons have 0 rest mass, and little relativistic mass?
For force, F = ma
For example, let m = negligable (like the photon's mass is) mass so = mn
If F = (mn)a and mn is small...
Here's what I know... the xray hits an electron and the electron goes of at some angle, with the xray deflecting the other way. I was curious if a certain portion of the electric versus the magnetic waves are transferred into the electron for momentum and another portion for the new(is it a new...
It appears more and more people are challenging the traditional interpretation of the Compton/Photoelectric Effects. Cramer back in 1986 used the Hanbury-Brown-Twiss effect to show that there is not a 1:1 correspondence between the emitted and dected quanta. You have to combine fractions of...
In the Rutherford scattering experiment a very thin gold foil target is bombarded with a beam of a particles of known kinetic energy. A detector which can be moved on a circle around the target counts the scattered particles. What was the impact parameter of a 4.57 MeV a particle if it was...
A photon having E = 14.7 keV energy scatters from a free electron inside a metal. What is the maximum energy the electron can gain from the photon?
Lamda'-lamda= change in lamda = h/mc (1-cos(theta)) ...having problems figuring out theta ... I know E=hc/lamda so lamda = hc/E ...so...
Suppose you have some thin film of pure carbon graphite sitting on some metal, like iron. Now we start irradiating some EM energy on it the graphite, but at a specific frequency.
Is it possible to select a frequency, and potentially some sort of spread/interference pattern to the EM energy...