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frequency of 159 MHz. That's the top end of the radio frequencies, maybe early microwave.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 19/01/2024 05:28:50The question is the same, what is the photon energy radiated by the rotating magnet?Small.3000 RPM is 50Hz so the photon energy is 50 times Planck's constant.That's high school maths. Why have you reopened a long-dead thread to ask about it?
The question is the same, what is the photon energy radiated by the rotating magnet?
Quote from: jeffreyH on 29/10/2016 12:30:05The reason E = hv is that h is joule second and v is cycles divided by seconds. Since cycles have no dimension you can simply cancel out the unit of seconds in the numerator and denominator leaving the dimension of the answer as joules. Note that cancelling a unit has no effect on the values in the equation. This is what we use dimensional analysis for. I have explained this in words rather than just using maths since that is how you requested answers.The unit for h is actually Joule second per cycle. Reduced Planck's constant, called ħ (h bar) has a unit of Joule second per radian. They have the same dimension, but different in numerical value. Using ħ can reduce the number of symbols used in equations of quantum mechanics, where we need to write down 2π if h were used instead.
The reason E = hv is that h is joule second and v is cycles divided by seconds. Since cycles have no dimension you can simply cancel out the unit of seconds in the numerator and denominator leaving the dimension of the answer as joules. Note that cancelling a unit has no effect on the values in the equation. This is what we use dimensional analysis for. I have explained this in words rather than just using maths since that is how you requested answers.
I posted it because I think the statement in bold above needs clarification. Just because a unit has no dimension, it doesn't mean that it can just be ignored. You will get different value if you use different units, such as radian, degree, grad, brad, etc.
Is a rotating magnet really emitting energy in free space? It certainly induces a current in a conductor, ......
In open space, this rotating magnet is emitting radiation and thus losing energy. Where is that energy coming from? If the rotating magnet reduces its (rotational) k.e. - where is the torque coming from that makes that happen?
By Newtonian mechanics, some torque would seem to operate on the rotating object.
Consider a magnet rotating in an infinite vacuum. Where does its angular momentum go? Newtonian mechanics says it is conserved!
Starting from the beginning, a rotating magnetic dipole (or electric dipole) should generate e-m radiation.
You need to accelerate a charge to generate a photon.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 20/01/2024 14:38:49I posted it because I think the statement in bold above needs clarification. Just because a unit has no dimension, it doesn't mean that it can just be ignored. You will get different value if you use different units, such as radian, degree, grad, brad, etc.Jeffrey didn't cancel "cycles" but "seconds", because [E] = ML2T-2 and [ν]= T-1 so [h] = ML2T-1. [X] means "dimensions of X "Conventionally, the frequency of radiation is always stated in Hz, to avoid the confusion you have made for yourself.
Frequency (symbol f), most often measured in hertz (symbol: Hz), is the number of occurrences of a repeating event per unit of time.[1] It is also occasionally referred to as temporal frequency for clarity and to distinguish it from spatial frequency. Ordinary frequency is related to angular frequency (symbol ω, with SI unit radian per second) by a factor of 2π. The period (symbol T) is the interval of time between events, so the period is the reciprocal of the frequency: f = 1/T.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency
Necromancy?, BC. I always thought necromancy was the divination of future events by dissecting a dead creature and examining it's entrails. This method has not as yet been ascertained to be effective!
Quote from: Bored chemist on 19/01/2024 15:05:01He's not talking about a betatron.He's talking about the angular speed of an electron. What else would you call a device that makes electrons orbit at a constant 109radians per second?
He's not talking about a betatron.
I also am fairly sure a rotating magnet would radiate em. It would have to rotate at quite a high speed to generate easily detectable radiation. I have been trying for several hours to mentally model the maths involved but I have failed so far. We normally look at charge acceleration to produce em as it is the most convenient method but one has to remember that the magnetic field is simply the electric field as seen from a different frame of reference.