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A certain shade of blue has a frequency of 7.29 × 1014 hz. What is the energy of exactly one photon of this light?

User Beric
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2 Answers

5 votes

To solve this problem, we're going to have to use the equation: E=hv

This equation tells us that the energy of a particle of light (E), called a photon, is proportional to its frequency (v), by a constant factor (h). That constant (Planck's constant) we know to be 6.626 × 10^-34 J·s. So, we can plug in the frequency and Planck's constant to solve for the energy (E).

E=( 6.626 × 10^-34 J·s)(7.29 × 10^14 hz)

E= 4.830354 × 10^-19

Round to 3 significant figures, and you're done!

E= 4.83 × 10^-19


User Killercowuk
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5.5k points
3 votes

Answer:


4.83* 10^(-19) J is the energy of exactly one photon of this light.

Step-by-step explanation:

Frequency of the blue shade light =
\\u =7.29* 10^(14) Hz

Energy of the photon is given by Planck's equation = E


E=h\\u

h = Planck's constant =
6.634* 10^(-34) Js


E=6.634* 10^(-34) Js* 7.29* 10^(14) s^(-1)


E=4.83* 10^(-19) J


4.83* 10^(-19) J is the energy of exactly one photon of this light.

User YaBCK
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