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the energy of a photon is h times f
The amount of energy in a photon of light is proportional to the frequency of the corresponding light wave.... frequency of the electromagnetic radiation of which the photon is a particle.
The energy of a photon depends on it's frequency
A Photon does not have any mass. It is merely a packet of energy. To calculate the energy of a photon, the formula is E = hνwhere h = Planck's constant = 6.63 x 10-34and ν = frequency of the light source (in Hz)
I believe it can - the energy of a photon is the product of the frequency and Plank's constant - and as far as I know, the frequency is not quantized.
A packet of light energy is called a photon.
The energy of the photon is 3,1631.e-19 joule.
. . . photon.
photon
The energy of the photon is the same as the energy lost by the electron
Only one photon is produced per electron in any de-excitation. The number of energy levels it drops only determines the energy of the photon emitted.
No, it could not. A blue photon carries more energy than a red photon, since the blue photon's frequency is higher. That means one red photon wouldn't deliver enough energy to the atom to give it the energy to emit a blue photon.