answersLogoWhite

0

Can we generate/produce a photon of any energy?

User Avatar

Ozella Dooley

Lvl 10
4y ago

Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Can we generate/produce a photon of any energy?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is the energy of photon?

the energy of a photon is h times f


What is the energy in a photon of light proportional to?

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 what?

The energy of a photon depends on it's frequency


If the mass of one photon is totally converted into energy it will yield a total energy of?

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)


Can Energy of a photon be any value along a continuous spectrum of energies?

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.


The light bearing packet of energy emitted by an electron is called a?

A packet of light energy is called a photon.


A photon has a wavelength 628 nm. Calculate the energy of the photon in joules?

The energy of the photon is 3,1631.e-19 joule.


What is a quantum of electromagnetic energy called?

. . . photon.


The is the particle that carries radiant energy?

photon


When an electron drops to a lower energy level what is the energy of a photon released?

The energy of the photon is the same as the energy lost by the electron


When 10 electrons drop from fifth to second energy level?

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.


Could an atom emit one photon of blue light after absorbing only one photon of red light?

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.