CHEM 14A Chapter Notes - Chapter 1B.1: Photon, Ultraviolet, Black-Body Radiation

22 views3 pages

Document Summary

As the object is heated to higher temperature, it glows more brightly and the color of light it gives off changes from red through orange and yellow toward white. The name signifies that the object does not favor one wavelength over another in the sense of absorbing a particular wavelength preferentially or emitting one preferentially. The figure on the left shows the intensity of the black-body radiation. It is the radiation emitted at different wavelengths by a heated black body, for a series of temperature. As the temperature rises, the maximum intensity of the radiation emitted occurs at short and shorter wavelengths. Red has the longest wavelength, which means it has the lowest energy photon. Stefan-boltzmann law: the total intensity of radiation emitted over all wavelengths increases as the fourth power of the absolute temperature. Discovered that the wavelength corresponding to the maximum in the intensity. Max is inversely proportional to the absolute temperature.

Get access

Grade+20% off
$8 USD/m$10 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
40 Verified Answers
Class+
$8 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
30 Verified Answers

Related textbook solutions

Related Documents

Related Questions