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Download Chapter 3 Electromagnetic Theory, Photons, and Light
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Lecture 6 Chapter 3 Electromagnetic Theory, Photons, and Light Photons Radiation Emission of light by atoms Example problem A laser pointer emits light at 630 nm in xy plane at =450 to axis x (counter clock-wise). The light is polarized along axis z , beam cross-section is A=1 mm2 and its power is P=1 mW. 1. Write an equation of E and B components of this EM wave for the region of the beam. z E E E0 cos k r t y B Find : 2 2c Find k: k 2 iˆ cos ˆj sin Find E0: P c 0 2 x I E0 Irradiance: A 2 E0 2 P Ac 0 E0 2 P Ac 0 k̂ Electric field: E 2c 2P 2 ˆ ˆ k̂ cos i cos j sin r t Ac 0 Example problem (continued) E 2c 2P 2 ˆ ˆ k̂ cos i cos j sin r t Ac 0 Magnetic field: B B0 cos k r t It is in phase with E. Need only find its amplitude and direction. B0 E0 / c 1 B0 c 1 B c 1 c y B x 2P Ac 0 2P ˆ i sin ˆj cos Ac 0 z 2c 2P ˆ 2 ˆ ˆ ˆ i sin j cos cos i cos j sin r t Ac 0 Example problem (continued) 2. This laser beam is reflected backwards by a mirror. What is the average force on the mirror due to the radiation pressure? Find average pressure Pt T Find force: F Pt T P 10 3 W 12 A2 2 6 . 6 10 N 8 c 3 10 m/s I P 2 2 c Ac 3. How much energy is contained in EM field of 1 m long beam? Power is amount of energy per unit time. During one second, light travels c meters: P 103 J/s 12 Energy (1m ) L 1 m 3 . 3 10 J 8 c 3 10 m/s Alternatively can find u using E0 and multiply by volume Classical EM waves versus photons The energy of a single light photon is E=h c The Planck’s constant h = 6.626×10-34 Js E1 h h 4 1019 J Visible light wavelength is ~ 0.5 m Example: laser pointer output power is ~ 1 mW number of photons emitted every second: P 103 J/s 15 2 . 5 10 photons/s 19 E1 4 10 J/photon Conclusion: in many every day situations the quantum nature of light is not pronounced and light could be treated as a classical EM wave Photons 1900: to explain black body radiation spectrum Max Planck suggested that light is emitted in small indivisible quanta of energy: E=h (h=6.626×10-34 J.s) 1905: to explain photoelectric effect Einstein stated that EM field itself is quantized Photons cannot be observed directly, one can only see them through interaction with matter - absorption. Photon is destroyed in the process. Photons carry energy and momentum (atoms recoil when emit photons) h or , where p p k 2 h propagation vector Experimental confirmation: Compton effect Photon Mean photon flux: no. photons per unit area per unit time AI P h 0 h 0 Energy per unit time crossing some area A optical power Energy of a single photon at mean frequency 0 in quasimonochromatic beam Number of photons emitted every second from a ~1 mW laser pointer is ~1015 photons Photons strike screen every 1 fs on average. Exact position and time of arrival for each photon cannot be predicted with absolute certainly - we can only predict the probabilities. Photon low Light exposure medium high photographic film At any location on a screen, the classical irradiance is proportional to the probability of detecting a photon at that location Quantum uncertainty. Example: throw a single coin, it will fall either heads or tails up, unpredictable but with 1015 coins - can predict result with high precision Photon statistics Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics: for distinguishable particles In quantum physics for indistinguishable particles: * Bose-Einstein statistics for bosons (particles with integer spin) * Fermi-Dirac statistics for fermions (particles with integer+half spins) Photons are bosons - many photons can simultaneously be in exactly the same state, i.e. have the same energy When a large number of photons occupy the same state (i.e. have the same energy, polarization and direction), the inherent granularity of the light beam vanishes and the EM field appears as the continuous medium of an electromagnetic wave - monochromatic plane wave. Different monochromatic plane waves represent different photon states Photon counter It is possible to detect single photons Example: photomultiplier tube (PMT) Photon kicks an electron out of cathode The electron is accelerated by an E-field toward a dynode The accelerated electron strikes the dynode and kicks out more electrons Many dynodes are used to get burst of ~105 electrons per single photoelectron The burst of electron current can be detected electronically Photon statistics low power light beam PMT Photons arrive at random. Poisson distribution of photons arriving at detector during time T Radiation: accelerated charges Field of a moving charge Electromagnetic pulse can propagate in space How can we initiate such pulse? Short pulse of transverse electric field Radiation: accelerated charges 1. Transverse pulse propagates at speed of light 2. Since E(t) there must be B 3. Direction of v is given by: E B E v B Electric dipole radiation Oscillating charges in dipole create sinusoidal E field and generate EM radiation Electric dipole radiation Dipole moment: p qd d d 0 cost p p0 cost Electric field of oscillating dipole: p0k 2 sin coskr t E 4 0 r Irradiance: 2 p0 4 I 2 3 sin 2 32 c 0 r 2 * EM wave is polarized along dipole * I ~ 4 - higher frequency, stronger radiation * No radiation emitted in direction of dipole Dipole antenna Example: connect AC generator to ‘dipole’ antenna/ Charges will run up and down - dipole moment will be oscillating and radiation will be emitted