Skip to main content

Quantum Physics and Nuclear Physics

Subject: Physics
Topic: 8
Cambridge Code: 0625


Photons and Light Energy

Photon - Discrete energy packet of light

Energy of Photon

E=hf=hcλE = hf = \frac{hc}{λ}

Where:

  • h = Planck's constant = 6.63 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s
  • f = frequency
  • c = speed of light = 3 × 10⁸ m/s
  • λ = wavelength

Higher frequency → more energy

Momentum of Photon

p=Ec=hfc=hλp = \frac{E}{c} = \frac{hf}{c} = \frac{h}{λ}


Work Function and Photoelectric Effect

Photoelectric effect - Electrons released from metal by light

Work Function (Φ)

Minimum energy needed to remove electron:

E=hf0=ΦE = hf_0 = Φ

Where f0f_0 is threshold frequency

For frequency above threshold: hf=Φ+Ekhf = Φ + E_k

Einstein's photoelectric equation: hf=Φ+12mvmax2hf = Φ + \frac{1}{2}mv_{\text{max}}^2

Key Points

Photons below threshold:

  • No electrons released (regardless of intensity)

Photons above threshold:

  • Electrons released with kinetic energy
  • More intense light → more electrons (not faster)
  • Higher frequency → faster electrons

Stopping potential (V_s): eVs=12mvmax2eV_s = \frac{1}{2}mv_{\text{max}}^2


Energy Levels

Energy levels - Discrete energies allowed for electrons

Excitation and Deexcitation

Electron absorbs photon:

  • Jumps to higher level
  • hf=E2E1hf = E_2 - E_1 (difference between levels)

Electron falls to lower level:

  • Emits photon
  • hf=E2E1hf = E_2 - E_1

Spectral lines correspond to:

  • Different energy level transitions
  • Absorbed or emitted light

Ionization

Energy needed to remove electron completely:

Ionization energy=hf\text{Ionization energy} = hf

Where f is frequency of ionizing radiation


Atomic Spectra

Emission spectrum:

  • Bright lines on dark background
  • Specific wavelengths from excited atoms

Absorption spectrum:

  • Dark lines on bright background
  • Wavelengths absorbed by atoms

Spectral lines unique to each element - Used for identification


Nuclear Structure

Nucleus contains:

  • Protons: Positive charge, mass ≈ 1 u
  • Neutrons: No charge, mass ≈ 1 u

Electrons orbit nucleus: Negative charge, much smaller mass

Notation

ZAX{}^A_Z\text{X}

Where:

  • X = element symbol
  • A = mass number (protons + neutrons)
  • Z = atomic number (protons)

Neutron number (N) = A - Z

Isotopes

Atoms of same element (same Z, different A)

  • Different neutrons
  • Different mass
  • Chemical behavior same
  • Radioactivity different

Radioactivity

Radioactivity - Spontaneous nuclear decay

Types of Decay

Alpha decay (α): Emits helium nucleus 24He{}^4_2\text{He} ZAXZ2A4Y+24He{}^A_Z\text{X} → {}^{A-4}_{Z-2}\text{Y} + {}^4_2\text{He}

Beta-minus decay (β⁻): Neutron → proton + electron ZAXZ+1AY+10e{}^A_Z\text{X} → {}^A_{Z+1}\text{Y} + {}^0_{-1}\text{e}

Beta-plus decay (β⁺): Proton → neutron + positron

Gamma decay (γ): Emits high-energy photon

  • Mass number A unchanged
  • Atomic number Z unchanged

Activity and Half-Life

Activity (A) - Number of decays per second

A=λNA = λN

Where:

  • λ = decay constant
  • N = number of nuclei remaining

Unit: Becquerels (Bq) = 1 decay/second

Half-Life

Half-life (t1/2t_{1/2}) - Time for half the nuclei to decay

N=N0(12)nN = N_0\left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^{n}

Where n = number of half-lives

Or exponentially: N=N0eλtN = N_0e^{-λt}

Decay Curve

Exponential decay:

  • Never reaches zero
  • Constant half-life
  • Log plot gives straight line

Mass-Energy Equivalence

Einstein's Mass-Energy Relation:

E=mc2E = mc^2

Where:

  • E = energy
  • m = mass
  • c = speed of light

Application:

  • Matter can convert to energy
  • Energy can create mass
  • Nuclear reactions release large energy

Nuclear Binding Energy

Mass defect: Loss of mass in nucleus

Δm=(Zmp+Nmn)mnucleusΔm = (Zm_p + Nm_n) - m_{\text{nucleus}}

Binding energy: BE=Δmc2BE = Δmc^2

Energy required to break nucleus apart

Binding energy per nucleon: BEA\frac{BE}{A}

  • Higher = more stable nucleus
  • Peak at iron-56

Nuclear Fission and Fusion

Fission

Heavy nucleus splits into lighter nuclei

  • Releases neutrons (causes chain reaction)
  • Releases enormous energy
  • Used in nuclear reactors and bombs

Chain reaction: 1 neutron → 2 → 4 → 8 ...

Fusion

Light nuclei combine to form heavier nucleus

  • Occurs at extreme temperature and pressure
  • Releases enormous energy
  • Sun's power source
  • Future clean energy source (hoped)

Background Radiation

Natural radioactivity from environment:

Sources:

  • Radon gas (largest contributor)
  • Cosmic rays
  • Soil and rocks
  • Food and water
  • Medical procedures

Safety: Cumulative exposure should be minimized


Key Points

  1. Photon energy E = hf
  2. Photoelectric effect needs photons above threshold
  3. Work function = minimum energy to remove electron
  4. Energy levels are discrete
  5. Spectral lines from level transitions
  6. Nucleus: protons + neutrons
  7. Isotopes: same Z, different A
  8. Radioactive decay: α, β, γ
  9. Half-life constant for each isotope
  10. E = mc² relates mass and energy

Practice Questions

  1. Calculate photon energy
  2. Identify photoelectric effect
  3. Find threshold frequency
  4. Calculate stopping potential
  5. Interpret spectral lines
  6. Balance nuclear equations
  7. Identify decay types
  8. Calculate half-lives
  9. Determine remaining nuclei
  10. Calculate binding energy

Revision Tips

  • Know E = hf thoroughly
  • Understand photoelectric concept
  • Learn decay equations
  • Practice half-life calculations
  • Know energy level transitions
  • Understand E = mc²
  • Know types of radiation
  • Practice nuclear equations
  • Consider practical applications