14.3k views
4 votes
The mass of an electron is 9.11×10−31 kg. If the de broglie wavelength for an electron in a hydrogen atom is 3.31×10−10 m

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer: The electron moves
0.73\% less fast than light

Step-by-step explanation:

The complete question is written below:

The mass of an electron is
9.11(10)^(-31) kg . If the de Broglie wavelength for an electron in a hydrogen atom is
3.31(10)^(-10) m, how fast is the electron moving relative to the speed of light? The speed of light is
3(10)^8 m/s.

The De Broglie wavelength equation is:


\lambda_(e)=(h)/(p_(e)) (1)

Where:


\lambda_(e)=3.31(10)^(-10) m is the de broglie wavelength for an electron


h=6.626(10)^(-34)J.s=6.626(10)^(-34)(m^(2)kg)/(s) is the Planck constant


p_(e) is the momentum of the electron

On the other hand, the momentum of the electron is given by:


p_(e)=m_(e)V_(e) (2)

Where:


m_(e)=9.11(10)^(-31) kg is the mass of the electron


V_(e) is the velocity of the electron

Substituting (2) in (1):


\lambda_(e)=(h)/(m_(e)V_(e)) (3)

Isolating
V_(e):


V_(e)=(h)/(m\lambda_(e)) (4)


V_(e)=(6.626(10)^(-34)J.s)/((9.11(10)^(-31) kg)(3.31(10)^(-10) m))

Finally:


V_(e)=2,197,379.461 m/s \approx 2.20(10)^(6) m/s This is the velocity of the electron

Calculating the ratio between the velocity of the electron and the velocity of a photon:


((2.20(10)^(6) m/s)/(3(10)^8 m/s))100\%=(0.0073)(100)=0.73\%

Therefore, the electron moves
0.73\% less fast than the photon (light).

User Steven Robbins
by
5.4k points