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Photons are typically absorbed by an electron when interacting with atoms. The electron that absorbs a photon will move to a higher energy orbital.
there is the believe that an atom may absorb a photon only if the frequency matches the electron orbital levels. Absorption spetrum == emission spectrum, etc
But there is the believe that an atom may absorb a photon only if the frequency matches the electron orbital levels.
Quote from: TheThinkerthere is the believe that an atom may absorb a photon only if the frequency matches the electron orbital levels. Absorption spetrum == emission spectrum, etc A precise line spectrum only applies to isolated atoms (eg in a rarified gas).In metals (plus liquids and other solids), the atoms are tightly packed, and the Pauli Exclusion principle comes into play:- No two interacting electrons can have exactly the same quantum state- The precise electron energy levels you see in a gas broadens out into a wide band of electron energies in a solid- So a photons with a wide range of energies will find an electron able to change levels by that amount- Allowing photons of many energy levels to interact with the material.There are many factors which contribute to spectral broadening (bored chemist must deal with all of these)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectral_line#Broadening_due_to_local_effectsBut most metals are reflective - incoming photons bounce off, rather than being absorbed.- Until the photon gets into the UV range, when it is possible to eject an electron from the surface, through the Photo-Electric effect (which won Einstein a Nobel Prize)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoelectric_effect
Say I have one microwave photon hitting an isolated air molecule (oxygen or nitrogen), what is the chances that the photon would be absorbed.
Depends on the energy/frequency of the photon. Low frequencies (radio waves) will ... (do this), higher frequencies will .... (do that)...
Hi.I've had three attempts at replying. I think the key is just to keep it really short and do only one thing. let's try this one thing.Quote from: alancalverd on 02/04/2023 07:42:40Depends on the energy/frequency of the photon. Low frequencies (radio waves) will ... (do this), higher frequencies will .... (do that)... No. The OP said "photon", they did not ask about "some radiation" or "an e-m wave". Therefore we can't really talk about classical models of e-m waves and how they interact with matter. A "photon" is a QM object. There are many ways a classical e-m wave could interact with matter, however, there is only one model of interaction between a photon and some matter that is well understood. That's a Quantum mechanical phenomena and much as was described in one of the first posts (@Origin). The fine details can vary but the basic theme is always the same:We have some QM particles (they are usually electrons) that can exist in only a certain set of states, a photon is incident upon that and it could move one of those QM objects from one state to another. Origin discussed the situation where those states were associated with orbitals around an atom. That's the main or vanilla flavoured situation and the best one to discuss. A common variation on the theme is a metal which has a delocalised conduction band. Same basic situation, you have some electrons and some states they can be in..... it's just that some of states are not associated with just one atom, they are delocalised AND also some states have high degeneracy (many states with the same energy) and the states can be very closely spaced - when all of these things happen we have the conduction band that is effectively a continuous band of energies that are possible and can accommodate many electrons etc.- - - - - - - - - - - @theThinker - did you really want to discuss just photons, or are you prepared to consider a more generalised electromagnetic wave that can be treated classically?- - - - - - - - - - - @theThinker also asked "why" or what the physical mechanism is. One answer that can be given is just that Quantum Mechanics (QM) does not tell you. We know that energy states for electrons are quantised, we know that they can change states and emit or absorb a photon in that process, we do not ask why. To make a more concrete demonstration of the inability to explain "why" or what the mechanism is you only need to consider our inability to predict WHEN it will happen. We can have an atom in an excited state, QM will tell us that it CAN emit a photon and drop to a lower energy state but it does not determine WHEN that will happen. You have all the time before it actually happens to ask yourself why it hasn't happened yet when everything seems to be set and ready to go.OK.... that seems to be about three different things I might have mentioned, sorry.Best Wishes.
My specific interest is whether a single microwave photon has a chance to be absorbed if it hits an isolated oxygen or nitrogen molecule or CO2 molecule. Boredchemist says no.
Quote from: theThinker on 03/04/2023 01:00:08My specific interest is whether a single microwave photon has a chance to be absorbed if it hits an isolated oxygen or nitrogen molecule or CO2 molecule. Boredchemist says no. And, give or take the possibility of a "not quite zero probability" due to isotopic substitution, he's sticking to it.That's why we can use microwave radio signals to send data like wifi through air.
Boredchemist says no.
Hi.Quote from: theThinker on 03/04/2023 01:00:08Boredchemist says no. He said a bit more than that. He's a chemist and it has been based on practical stuff rather than any theory. It's apparent the abosrption phenomena being described used a classical model of e-m radiation in its derivation. So there are some aspects that I just wouldn't be able to go along with. However, @Bored chemist has qualified his comments in a later post. The main issue is that you ( @theThinker ) seem determined to consider a single photon. That's an extreme situation and therefore not really subject to classical models. However, you would have enormous amounts of trouble trying to detect anything with any equipment that exists. Even the most sensitive pices of equipment used in high energy laser laboratories and state of the art optics research don't reliably detect single photons. As for how you could detect the change that may have occurred in a single atom - well that again is just theory not something you would do in practice. If you want just some rough practical rule, then nothing happens. You don't seem to be too interested in complex theory.Let's just put a few minor points down here: 1. You ( @theThinker ) have started by assuming you will know the frequency of the photon you sent in. However, you just can't. There is an uncertainity principle relating energy and time. Depending on the way in which you generated the photon the uncertainty is usually spread out between the time of emission and the frequecy that it has. To say this another way, the photon does not have a well defined single frequency until after the atom has absorbed it. What you may think was a microwave photon is actually a superposition of many states and the best you could hope for is that the coefficients for the states were strongly peaked around the frequency, ν, that you think it should have. So a small but non-zero probality exists that the photon would act as if was in the visible light frequencies (or somewhere else). 2. A similar sort of uncertainty exists for the atom. You cannot know precisely what momentum it has, simply because you have needed to confined it to some region of space where you intend to aim the photon. If it is receeding from the photon then the effective frequency of the photon is red-shifted, conversely it would be blue-shifted if the atom was moving toward the photon at the time of emission. The more you confine the atom, to be sure that the photon is on target and likely to interact with it, the less you will know about the momentum of that atom. 3. Other stuff but you probably aren't too interested in the theory and I'm out of time for now.Best Wishes.
But this is what most elementary textbook would assume.
I have always assumed a monochromatic light has photon of a definite frequency w/o uncertainty principle involved.
Hi again,Quote from: theThinker on 03/04/2023 18:02:48But this is what most elementary textbook would assume. Which textbook? It would help to see what they said, or at least which topic they are covering and at what sort of level of study. Many school level textbooks would only mention a "photon" for the situation of raising an electron from one orbit to another (this will later be described as an atomic absorption). Meanwhile, a textbook for biochemists wishing to identify molecules by their infra-red absorption spectrum is referring to something different - in that situation you aren't really looking at "atomic absorption spectrums" but "molecular absorption spectrums". For the first (atomic absoption spectrums) you have electrons being directly moved to higher energy orbits. For the second (molecular absorption spectrums) you have much larger structures - molecules - and they are being made to vibrate or rotate. For the molecular spectrums you tend to use a classical model of electro-magnetic radiation - mainly because such theory exists and it is manageable. It would be far too complicated to apply a purely quantum mechanical description. A good text on molecular absorption discusses theory that works on a fairly small scale but it is unlikely to use the word "photon" or apply the theory down to that level. If we go back to the comments made earlier by @Bored chemist , it may now start to make more sense to you. Boredchemist has correctly identified that microwave radiation is way off the usual frequencies you observe for atomic absorption spectrums. It's even a bit low for the usual infra-red molecular absorption spectrums. However there is a part of those molecular movements that can happen at microwave frequencies - these tend to be complete rotations of the molecule rather than just agitation or vibration within the molecule. This phenomena is especially noticeable for water molecules and is one of the things that make microwave ovens work.Quote from: theThinker on 03/04/2023 18:02:48I have always assumed a monochromatic light has photon of a definite frequency w/o uncertainty principle involved. Quite often you are meant to make an assumption like that. As @alancalverd has just implied, you need to determine some level of idealisation and simplification which you are prepared to accept.Best Wishes.
but the level of physics is beyond me.
Say we have a piece of copper isolated in a vacuum container. We now heat the temperature of the conatiner to above that of the copper. A net radiation photons would be absorbed by the copper raising its temperature.1) How is the photon absorbed by the copper (ignore re-emission) 2) What actually happen when we say the temperature of the copper has risen.
If you double the temperature of the gas then you should double the speed at which those particles move