UNIVERSITY PHYSICS UCI PKG
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781323575208
Author: YOUNG
Publisher: PEARSON C
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Question
Chapter 39, Problem 39.58P
(a)
To determine
The temperature of the blackbody for which the peak intensity wave length forms a first order bright fringe at
(b)
To determine
Time taken by the sphere to radiate
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
10 mW of light is incident on a piece of GaAs
which is 0.2mm thick. The incident light is a
mixture of 5mW at A1=1.553µm and 5mW at
12=0.828um. A total of 7mW mixed light exits
out of the GaAs. Assume no reflections at the
air/GaAs interface and any light generated by
recombination won't exit the GaAs. What are
the absorption coefficients, a, for two
different wavelengths?
Problem 9: For a Gaussian laser beam in air with a 0.5mm waist radius and X=850nm,
a. Find the (far field) diffraction half angle and the beam waist w(z) at z=50m
b. If the laser emits 5mW, what is the peak irradiance at z=50m?
c. What near field beam waist radius is required to limit the diffracted beam diameter to 1cm
at 50m? What detector diameter is needed to encircle (detect) 50% of the power?
An oil drop of volume 0.2 c.c. is dropped on the surface of a tank of water of area 1 sq. meter. The film spreads uniformly over the surface and white light which is incident normally is observed through a spectrometer. The spectrum is seen to contain one dark band whose centre has wavelength 5.5 x 10 cm in air. Find the refractive index of. Moil.
Chapter 39 Solutions
UNIVERSITY PHYSICS UCI PKG
Ch. 39.2 - Prob. 39.2TYUCh. 39.3 - Prob. 39.3TYUCh. 39.4 - Prob. 39.4TYUCh. 39.5 - Prob. 39.5TYUCh. 39.6 - Prob. 39.6TYUCh. 39 - Prob. 39.1DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.2DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.3DQCh. 39 - When an electron beam goes through a very small...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.5DQ
Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.6DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.7DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.8DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.9DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.10DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.11DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.12DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.13DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.14DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.15DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.16DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.17DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.18DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.19DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.20DQCh. 39 - Prob. 39.21DQCh. 39 - When you check the air pressure in a tire, a...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.1ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.2ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.3ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.4ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.5ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.6ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.7ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.8ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.9ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.10ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.11ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.12ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.13ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.14ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.15ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.16ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.17ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.18ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.19ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.20ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.21ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.22ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.23ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.24ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.25ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.26ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.27ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.28ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.29ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.30ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.31ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.32ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.33ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.34ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.35ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.36ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.37ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.38ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.39ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.40ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.41ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.42ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.43ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.44ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.45ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.46ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.47ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.48ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.49ECh. 39 - Prob. 39.50PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.51PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.52PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.53PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.54PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.55PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.56PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.57PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.58PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.59PCh. 39 - An Ideal Blackbody. A large cavity that has a very...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.61PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.62PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.63PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.64PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.65PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.66PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.67PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.68PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.69PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.70PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.71PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.72PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.73PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.74PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.75PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.76PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.77PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.78PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.79PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.80PCh. 39 - A particle with mass m moves in a potential U(x) =...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.82PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.83PCh. 39 - DATA In the crystallography lab where you work,...Ch. 39 - Prob. 39.85PCh. 39 - Prob. 39.86CPCh. 39 - Prob. 39.87CPCh. 39 - Prob. 39.88PPCh. 39 - Prob. 39.89PPCh. 39 - Prob. 39.90PPCh. 39 - Prob. 39.91PP
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- A material has an absorption coefficient of a-0.39 mm1 at a particu lar wavelength, for which an absorption measurement is carried out. The measured sample is 1 mm thick. Calculate the attenuation (1/lo) of the lightarrow_forwardA blackbody radiator in the shape of a sphere has a surface area of 152 If it has a temperature of 1200 K how much energy does it emit per second? If the sun emits light with a peak wavelength of 500 nm. What is the temperature of the sun? Two slits, 0.5 mm apart, are placed at a distance of 1.5 meters from a screen. Light of 300 nm illuminates the two slits and an interference pattern is observed on the screen. What is the distance between the central bright spot and the first bright spot on either side?arrow_forwardMonochromatic X-rays are incident on a crystal. The first-order Bragg peak is observed when the angle of incidence is 34.0°. The crystal spacing is known to be 0.347 nm. What is the wavelength of the X rays?arrow_forward
- For sodium light of wavelength 5893Å, calculate thickness of quarter wave plate. Given ne = 1.553 and no = 1.544.arrow_forwardFirst-order Bragg scattering from a certain crystal occurs at an angle of incidence of 63.8°; see figure below. The wavelength of the x-rays is 0.261nm. Assuming that the scattering is from the dashed planes shown, find the unit cell size ao. 63.8° X raysarrow_forwardA metal with body centered cubic (bcc) structure show the first (i.e. smallest angle) diffraction peak at a Bragg angle of 0 = 30°. The wavelength of X-ray used is 2.1 Å. The volume of the PRIMITIVE unit cell of the metal is (a) 26.2 (Å)³ (b) 13.1(Á)³ (c) 9.3 (Á)³ (d) 4.6 (Ấ)³arrow_forward
- When a diffraction pattern of a crystalline solid is recorded using an X-ray beam of wavelength 0.26 nm, the first order diffraction peak occurs at a scattering angle of 35°. If the error in the measurements of angle and wayelength are 1° and 0.01 nm respectively, then determine the error in measuring the interplanar spacing. (a) 22.86 nm (b) 32.38 nm (c) 15.2 nm (d) 13.2 nmarrow_forwardIn an aircraft, to protect a PCB from external interference signals it is housed in an Aluminum(Al) Box (this is normally referred to as shielding). Conductivity of Al is 38.2 x 106 S/m & µr = 1. What shall be the minimum thickness of the Al sheet from which this box is made, if we have to block 1.6 MHz interference signal from passing through this sheet?arrow_forwardProblem 01: An x-ray diffractometer (XRD) recorder chart for an element which has either the BCC or the FCC crystal structure showed diffraction peaks at the following 20 angles: 40.663°, 47.314°, 69.144°, and 83.448°. (The wavelength 2 of the incoming radiation was 0.15405 nm.) Now using the Bragg's law and d-spacing formula: (a) Generalize the concept of radius ratio identify the crystal structure of the element. (b) Determine the lattice constant of the element. (c) Identify the element use the data of the Table 1. (d) If you were told that the metal is palladium, would you be surprised? How do you identify the discrepancy? You can use this table for interpretation. Table: 1: Selected metals that have the BCC, FCC, HCP crystal structure at room temperature (20°C) and their lattice constant, atomic radius, density, melting point temperature. Lattice Constants 20°C, nm Melting Paint, °C Atomic Radins, nm Crystal Structuret (20°C) Element Symbol Aluminum AI Sb 660 Antimony Arsenic 630…arrow_forward
- Nuclear-pumped x-ray lasers are seen as a possible weapon to destroy ICBM booster rockets at ranges up to 2000 km. One limitation on such a device is the spreading of the beam due to diffraction, with resulting dilution of beam intensity. Consider such a laser operating at a wavelength of 1.40 nm. The element that emits light is the end of a wire with diameter 0.200 mm. (a) Calculate the diameter of the central beam at a target 2000 km away from the beam source. (b) What is the ratio of the beam intensity at the target to that at the end of the wire? (The laser is fired from space, so neglect any atmospheric absorption.)arrow_forwardGallium arsenide (GaAs) is an expensive alloy used for high performance multijunction solar cells. A certain GaAs absorber layer is designed to absorb 95% of the incident red light = 700 nm. The complex refractive index of GaAs at this wavelength is given by ñGaAs = 3.77+ i0.141. By what fraction can the thickness of the GaAs absorber layer be decreased, if we introduce a lambertian scatterer at the front of the absorber layer and an ideal reflector at the back? Give a percentage [%]arrow_forwardAt a wavelength 692 nm, the ordinary and extra-ordinary refractive indices in a uniaxial crystal are 1.558 and 1.611, respectively. If we make a thin disk of the material, with the optical axis parallel to the plane of the disk, what thickness of disk (in microns) would make a true zero-order quarter-wave plate?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Modern PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781111794378Author:Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. MoyerPublisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics Volume 3PhysicsISBN:9781938168185Author:William Moebs, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStaxPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
Modern Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781111794378
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. Moyer
Publisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics Volume 3
Physics
ISBN:9781938168185
Author:William Moebs, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning