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None of which changes the dimensions of h or ħ : joule.second. 2π is a dimensionless constant.
The unit was formerly an SI supplementary unit and is currently a dimensionless SI derived unit
radian/sec is not a frequency but a rate of change of angle or heading. A "standard rate 1 turn" in an airplane is 0.0524 radian/second.
The radian per second (symbol: rad⋅s−1 or rad/s) is the unit of angular velocity in the International System of Units (SI). The radian per second is also the SI unit of angular frequency (symbol ω, omega). The radian per second is defined as the angular frequency that results in the angular displacement increasing by one radian every second.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radian_per_second
h/2π = ħ is still joule.sec but 2π turns up in so many calculations that it is simply a more compact way of writing equations.
An antenna is oscillating at 1 billion radian per second. What's the energy of its photon?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 17/01/2024 14:43:33An antenna is oscillating at 1 billion radian per second. What's the energy of its photon?Seriously? What do you think the energy of a photon is from an antenna oscillating at 57.3 billion degrees per second? Does the question even make sense to you?
109 rad/sec is a rate of rotation,
The unit hertz (Hz) is dimensionally equivalent, but by convention it is only used for frequency f, never for angular frequency ω. This convention is used to help avoid the confusion that arises when dealing with quantities such as frequency and angular quantities because the units of measure (such as cycle or radian) are considered to be one and hence may be omitted when expressing quantities in SI units.
The question doesn't make sense. 109 rad/sec is a rate of rotation, so presumably we are looking at a betatron, not an antenna. The electron energy, and hence the energy of any photons emitted, depends on the radius of the torus. I may have time to do the calculation later, but the dog needs a walk!
Quote from: Origin on 17/01/2024 15:22:25Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 17/01/2024 14:43:33An antenna is oscillating at 1 billion radian per second. What's the energy of its photon?Seriously? What do you think the energy of a photon is from an antenna oscillating at 57.3 billion degrees per second? Does the question even make sense to you?If it wasn't obvious to you yet, I referred to the electric field in the antenna.
Photonic interpretation for Planck's law states that hf is the energy of one photon. Thus radius of thetorus or antenna doesn't affect photon energy, as long as the frequency can be kept the same.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 19/01/2024 04:30:46Photonic interpretation for Planck's law states that hf is the energy of one photon. Thus radius of thetorus or antenna doesn't affect photon energy, as long as the frequency can be kept the same.But it does affect the energy of the electron that generates the photon. It all gets a bit complicated as it's quite easy to get an electron up to 0.9c in a betatron, at which point the relativistic corrections become very significant.
The question is the same, what is the photon energy radiated by the rotating magnet?
It supposed to affect the number of photons radiated by the antenna.
How does relativistic corrections affect the photon frequency, and its energy?
He's not talking about a betatron.