Prior to Planck’s derivation of the distribution law for black-body radiation, Wien found empirically a closely related distribution function which is very nearly but not exactly in agreement with the experimental results, namely ρ(λ,T) = (a/λ5)e−b/λkT. This formula shows small deviations from Planck’s at long wavelengths. (a) Find a form of the Planck distribution which is appropriate for short wavelengths (Hint: consider the behaviour of the term ehc/λkT - 1 in this limit). (b) Compare your expression from (a) with Wien’s empirical formula and hence determine the constants a and b. (c) Integrate Wien’s empirical expression for ρ(λ,T) over all wavelengths and show that the result is consistent with the Stefan–Boltzmann law (Hint: to compute the integral use the substitution x = hc/λkT and then refer to the Resource section). (d) Show that Wien’s empirical expression is consistent with Wien’s law.
Prior to Planck’s derivation of the distribution law for black-body radiation, Wien found empirically a closely related distribution function which is very nearly but not exactly in agreement with the experimental results, namely ρ(λ,T) = (a/λ5)e−b/λkT. This formula shows small deviations from Planck’s at long wavelengths. (a) Find a form of the Planck distribution which is appropriate for short wavelengths (Hint: consider the behaviour of the term ehc/λkT - 1 in this limit). (b) Compare your expression from (a) with Wien’s empirical formula and hence determine the constants a and b. (c) Integrate Wien’s empirical expression for ρ(λ,T) over all wavelengths and show that the result is consistent with the Stefan–Boltzmann law (Hint: to compute the integral use the substitution x = hc/λkT and then refer to the Resource section). (d) Show that Wien’s empirical expression is consistent with Wien’s law.
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