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What is the de Broglie wavelength of an electron traveling at 1.62×105 m/s ?

User Ssundarraj
by
5.5k points

2 Answers

4 votes

Answer : The wavelength of an electron is,
4.39* 10^(-9)m

Explanation :

According to de-Broglie, the expression for wavelength is,


\lambda=(h)/(p)

and,


p=mv

where,

p = momentum, m = mass, v = velocity

So, the formula will be:


\lambda=(h)/(mv)

where,

h = Planck's constant =
6.626* 10^(-34)Js


\lambda = wavelength = ?

m = mass of electron =
9.31* 10^(-31)kg

v = velocity =
1.62* 10^5m/s

Now we have to calculate the wavelength.

Now put all the given values in the above formula, we get:


\lambda=(h)/(mv)


\lambda=(6.626* 10^(-34)Js)/((9.31* 10^(-31)kg)* (1.62* 10^5m/s))


\lambda=4.39* 10^(-9)m

Therefore, the wavelength of an electron is,
4.39* 10^(-9)m

User Johan Davidsson
by
4.8k points
4 votes

Answer:

0.449 10^(-8) meters


0.449 * 10^(-8) meters

Step-by-step explanation:

Use the deBroglie equation for the wavelength (lambda):


lambda = (h)/(m*v)

where h stands for the Plank constant:
6.6261 * 10^(-34) J

m stands for the mass of the electron:
9.109 * 10^(-31) kg

and v is the given velocity:
v = 1.62 *  10^5 (m)/(s)

Evaluating lambda for these values:


lambda = (h)/(m*v)= (6.6261 * 10^(-34) )/(9.109 * 10^(-31) * 1.62 * 10^(5)) = 0.449* 10^(-8) m

User Harshil Raval
by
4.9k points