I would describe it as vibrating electrons rather than accelerating electrons.
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One could more accurately call it photons released when electrons return from an excited state to a lower energy configuration.
No. Electromagnetic waves are produced by accelerating charges (NOT by moving charges, they have to accelerate); a neutron has no net electrical charge.
electromagnetic radiation is caused by radiant energy generated by accelerating electrons of photons travelling as waves.
Light waves originate from a light source, such as the sun, a light bulb, or a laser. When an object absorbs energy, it can emit photons, which are the elementary particles of light that travel as electromagnetic waves.
Light waves are not caused by vibrating objects. Light waves are electromagnetic waves that do not require a medium to propagate, unlike sound waves which are caused by vibrating objects. The vibrations of charged particles, such as electrons, generate light waves.
Light waves are electromagnetic waves that are caused by the acceleration of charged particles, such as electrons. These charged particles create oscillating electric and magnetic fields that propagate through space as light waves.
Electromagnetic waves come from accelerating electric charges, often electrons in atoms. The energy given off travels in a wave that is partly electric and partly magnetic.
Radio waves are a type of electromagnetic radiation that are emitted by accelerating electric charges. When electrons within an antenna are oscillated or accelerated, they create electromagnetic waves at radio frequencies. These waves then propagate through space and can be received by devices like radios or antennas.
Light waves are absorbed by electrons, which become elevated in energy state when this occurs. For different electrons on different orbitals the precise frequency is required, and when the electron lowers its energy state it releases a light-wave equivalent to that required to elevate it there initially.
Light waves are created when charged particles, such as electrons, are accelerated or decelerated. This acceleration causes the particles to emit photons, which are particles of light that travel as waves. This process occurs in various natural phenomena and in artificial sources such as light bulbs and lasers.
Classical they will emit electromagnetic waves (light and radio waves). Quantum effects might limit this since if the electrons are in the ground state (or all lower states are occupied) they can not emit any photons (quanta of electromagnetic waves).
Electromagnetic waves are produced by accelerating electric charges or changing magnetic fields. Examples include light waves produced by the sun, radio waves from a radio antenna, and X-rays from medical equipment.
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