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Question: For your work in a mass spectrometry


For your work in a mass spectrometry lab, you are investigating the absorption spectrum of one-electron ions. To maintain the atoms in an ionized state, you hold them at low density in an ion trap, a device that uses a configuration of electric fields to confine ions. The majority of the ions are in their ground state, so that is the initial state for the absorption transitions that you observe.
a. If the longest wavelength that you observe in the absorption spectrum is 13.56 nm, what is the atomic number Z for the ions?
b. What is the next shorter wavelength that the ions will absorb?
c. When one of the ions absorbs a photon of wavelength 6.78 nm, a free electron is produced. What is the kinetic energy (in electron volts) of the electron?


> An object is 16.0 cm to the left of a lens. The lens forms an image 36.0 cm to the right of the lens. a. What is the focal length of the lens? Is the lens converging or diverging? b. If the object is 8.00 mm tall, how tall is the image? Is it erect or

> Compute the kinetic energy of a proton (mass 1.67 * 10-27 kg) using both the nonrelativistic and relativistic expressions, and compute the ratio of the two results (relativistic divided by nonrelativistic) for speeds of a. 8.00 * 107 m/s and b. 2.85 *

> The thin glass shell shown in Fig. E34.15 has a spherical shape with a radius of curvature of 12.0 cm, and both of its surfaces can act as mirrors. A seed 3.30 mm high is placed 15.0 cm from the center of the mirror along the optic axis, as shown in the

> A converging lens with a focal length of 12.0 cm forms a virtual image 8.00 mm tall, 17.0 cm to the right of the lens. Determine the position and size of the object. Is the image erect or inverted? Are the object and image on the same side or opposite si

> For each thin lens shown in Fig. E34.37, calculate the location of the image of an object that is 18.0 cm to the left of the lens. The lens material has a refractive index of 1.50, and the radii of curvature shown are only the magnitudes. Figure E34

> A lensmaker wants to make a magnifying glass from glass that has an index of refraction n = 1.55 and a focal length of 20.0 cm. If the two surfaces of the lens are to have equal radii, what should that radius be?

> The theory of relativity sets an upper limit on the speed that a particle can have. Are there also limits on the energy and momentum of a particle? Explain.

> A converging lens with a focal length of 9.00 cm forms an image of a 4.00-mm-tall real object that is to the left of the lens. The image is 1.30 cm tall and erect. Where are the object and image located? Is the image real or virtual?

> You are holding an elliptical serving platter. How would you need to travel for the serving platter to appear round to another observer?

> When a monochromatic light source moves toward an observer, its wavelength appears to be shorter than the value measured when the source is at rest. Does this contradict the hypothesis that the speed of light is the same for all observers? Explain.

> A converging lens forms an image of an 8.00-mm-tall real object. The image is 12.0 cm to the left of the lens, 3.40 cm tall, and erect. What is the focal length of the lens? Where is the object located?

> A converging lens with a focal length of 70.0 cm forms an image of a 3.20-cm-tall real object that is to the left of the lens. The image is 4.50 cm tall and inverted. Where are the object and image located in relation to the lens? Is the image real or vi

> A converging meniscus lens (see Fig. 34.32a) with a refractive index of 1.52 has spherical surfaces whose radii are 7.00 cm and 4.00 cm. What is the position of the image if an object is placed 24.0 cm to the left of the lens? What is the magnification?

> An insect 3.75 mm tall is placed 22.5 cm to the left of a thin planoconvex lens. The left surface of this lens is flat, the right surface has a radius of curvature of magnitude 13.0 cm, and the index of refraction of the lens material is 1.70. a. Calcul

> A lens forms an image of an object. The object is 16.0 cm from the lens. The image is 12.0 cm from the lens on the same side as the object. a. What is the focal length of the lens? Is the lens converging or diverging? b. If the object is 8.50 mm tall,

> The speed of light relative to still water is 2.25 * 108 m/s. If the water is moving past us, the speed of light we measure depends on the speed of the water. Do these facts violate Einstein’s second postulate? Explain.

> The glass rod of Exercise 34.25 is immersed in a liquid. An object 14.0 cm from the vertex of the left end of the rod and on its axis is imaged at a point 9.00 cm from the vertex inside the liquid. What is the index of refraction of the liquid? From Exe

> A student asserts that a material particle must always have a speed slower than that of light, and a massless particle must always move at exactly the speed of light. Is she correct? If so, how do massless particles such as photons and neutrinos acquire

> The left end of a long glass rod 8.00 cm in diameter, with an index of refraction of 1.60, is ground and polished to a convex hemispherical surface with a radius of 4.00 cm. An object in the form of an arrow 1.50 mm tall, at right angles to the axis of t

> The glass rod of Exercise 34.22 is immersed in oil (n = 1.45). An object placed to the left of the rod on the rod’s axis is to be imaged 1.20 m inside the rod. How far from the left end of the rod must the object be located to form the image? From Exerc

> The left end of a long glass rod 6.00 cm in diameter has a convex hemispherical surface 3.00 cm in radius. The refractive index of the glass is 1.60. Determine the position of the image if an object is placed in air on the axis of the rod at the followin

> According to the discussion in Section 34.2, light rays are reversible. Are the formulas in the table in this chapter’s Summary still valid if object and image are interchanged? What does reversibility imply with respect to the forms of the various formu

> A person is lying on a diving board 3.00 m above the surface of the water in a swimming pool. She looks at a penny that is on the bottom of the pool directly below her. To her, the penny appears to be a distance of 7.00 m from her. What is the depth of t

> The diameter of Mars is 6794 km, and its minimum distance from the earth is 5.58 * 107 km. When Mars is at this distance, find the diameter of the image of Mars formed by a spherical, concave telescope mirror with a focal length of 1.75 m.

> For a concave spherical mirror that has focal length f = +18.0 cm, what is the distance of an object from the mirror’s vertex if the image is real and has the same height as the object?

> A transparent liquid fills a cylindrical tank to a depth of 3.60 m. There is air above the liquid. You look at normal incidence at a small pebble at the bottom of the tank. The apparent depth of the pebble below the liquid’s surface is 2.45 m. What is th

> Repeat Exercise 34.5 for the case in which the mirror is convex. From Exercise 34.5 An object 0.600 cm tall is placed 16.5 cm to the left of the vertex of a concave spherical mirror having a radius of curvature of 22.0 cm. a. Draw a principal-ray diag

> The focal length of a simple lens depends on the color (wavelength) of light passing through it. Why? Is it possible for a lens to have a positive focal length for some colors and negative for others? Explain.

> For a convex spherical mirror that has focal length f = -12.0 cm, what is the distance of an object from the mirror’s vertex if the height of the image is half the height of the object?

> The bottom of the passenger-side mirror on your car notes, “Objects in mirror are closer than they appear.” Is this true? Why?

> A dentist uses a curved mirror to view teeth on the upper side of the mouth. Suppose she wants an erect image with a magnification of 2.00 when the mirror is 1.25 cm from a tooth. (Treat this problem as though the object and image lie along a straight li

> A concave mirror has a radius of curvature of 34.0 cm. a. What is its focal length? b. If the mirror is immersed in water (refractive index 1.33), what is its focal length?

> You hold a spherical salad bowl 60 cm in front of your face with the bottom of the bowl facing you. The bowl is made of polished metal with a 35-cm radius of curvature. a. Where is the image of your 5.0-cm-tall nose located? b. What are the image’s siz

> A student claims that she can start a fire on a sunny day using just the sun’s rays and a concave mirror. How is this done? Is the concept of image relevant? Can she do the same thing with a convex mirror? Explain.

> A coin is placed next to the convex side of a thin spherical glass shell having a radius of curvature of 18.0 cm. Reflection from the surface of the shell forms an image of the 1.5-cm-tall coin that is 6.00 cm behind the glass shell. Where is the coin lo

> Repeat Exercise 34.24 for the case in which the end of the rod is ground to a concave hemispherical surface with radius 4.00 cm. From Exercise 34.24: The left end of a long glass rod 8.00 cm in diameter, with an index of refraction of 1.60, is ground an

> An object is 18.0 cm from the center of a spherical silvered-glass Christmas tree ornament 6.00 cm in diameter. What are the position and magnification of its image?

> When a room has mirrors on two opposite walls, an infinite series of reflections can be seen. Discuss this phenomenon in terms of images. Why do the distant images appear fainter?

> For what range of object positions does a concave spherical mirror form a real image? What about a convex spherical mirror?

> If a spherical mirror is immersed in water, does its focal length change? Explain.

> Explain why the focal length of a plane mirror is infinite, and explain what it means for the focal point to be at infinity.

> The image of a tree just covers the length of a plane mirror 4.00 cm tall when the mirror is held 35.0 cm from the eye. The tree is 28.0 m from the mirror. What is its height?

> For the situation shown in Fig. 34.3, is the image distance s′ positive or negative? Is the image real or virtual? Explain your answers. From Fig. 34.3: 34.3 Light rays from the object at point P are refracted at the plane interfac

> A photon of green light has a wavelength of 520 nm. Find the photon’s frequency, magnitude of momentum, and energy. Express the energy in both joules and electron volts.

> The negative muon has a charge equal to that of an electron but a mass that is 207 times as great. Consider a hydrogen like atom consisting of a proton and a muon. a. What is the reduced mass of the atom? b. What is the ground-level energy (in electron

> An atom with mass m emits a photon of wavelength λ. a. What is the recoil speed of the atom? b. What is the kinetic energy K of the recoiling atom? c. Find the ratio K/E, where E is the energy of the emitted photon. If this ratio is much less than uni

> You take a lens and mask it so that light can pass through only the bottom half of the lens. How does the image formed by the masked lens compare to the image formed before masking?

> As an amateur astronomer, you are studying the apparent brightness of stars. You know that a star’s apparent brightness depends on its distance from the earth and also on the fraction of its radiated energy that is in the visible region

> In the crystallography lab where you work, you are given a single crystal of an unknown substance to identify. To obtain one piece of information about the substance, you repeat the Davisson–Germer experiment to determine the spacing of

> Imagine another universe in which the value of Planck’s constant is 0.0663 J.s, but in which the physical laws and all other physical constants are the same as in our universe. In this universe, two physics students are playing catch. They are 12 m apart

> A particle with mass m moves in a potential energy U(x)= A x , where A is a positive constant. In a simplified picture, quarks (the constituents of protons, neutrons, and other particles, as will be described in Chapter 44) have a potential energy of int

> A certain atom has an energy state 3.50 eV above the ground state. When excited to this state, the atom remains for 2.0 µs, on average, before it emits a photon and returns to the ground state. a. What are the energy and wavelength of the photon? b. Wh

> For x rays with wavelength 0.0300 nm, the m = 1 intensity maximum for a crystal occurs when the angle θ in Fig. 39.2 is 35.8°. At what angle u does the m = 1 maximum occur when a beam of 4.50-keV electrons is used instead? Assume

> A certain atom has an energy level 2.58 eV above the ground level. Once excited to this level, the atom remains in this level for 1.64 * 10-7 s (on average) before emitting a photon and returning to the ground level. a. What is the energy of the photon

> If your wavelength were 1.0 m, you would undergo considerable diffraction in moving through a doorway. a. What must your speed be for you to have this wavelength? (Assume that your mass is 60.0 kg.) b. At the speed calculated in part (a), how many year

> The radii of atomic nuclei are of the order of 5.0 * 10-15 m. a. Estimate the minimum uncertainty in the momentum of an electron if it is confined within a nucleus. b. Take this uncertainty in momentum to be an estimate of the magnitude of the momentum

> You can’t see clearly underwater with the naked eye, but you can if you wear a face mask or goggles (with air between your eyes and the mask or goggles). Why is there a difference? Could you instead wear eyeglasses (with water between your eyes and the e

> The radii of atomic nuclei are of the order of 5.0 * 10-15 m. a. Estimate the minimum uncertainty in the momentum of a proton if it is confined within a nucleus. b. Take this uncertainty in momentum to be an estimate of the magnitude of the momentum. U

> a. A particle with mass m has kinetic energy equal to three times its rest energy. What is the de Broglie wavelength of this particle? (Hint: You must use the relativistic expressions for momentum and kinetic energy: E2 =(pc)2 +(mc2)2 and K = E - mc2.)

> An electron beam and a photon beam pass through identical slits. On a distant screen, the first dark fringe occurs at the same angle for both of the beams. The electron speeds are much slower than that of light. a. Express the energy of a photon in term

> Coherent light is passed through two narrow slits whose separation is 20.0 µm. The second-order bright fringe in the interference pattern is located at an angle of 0.0300 rad. If electrons are used instead of light, what must the kinetic energy (in elect

> A beam of electrons is accelerated from rest and then passes through a pair of identical thin slits that are 1.25 nm apart. You observe that the first double-slit interference dark fringe occurs at ±18.0° from the original direction of the beam when view

> Electrons go through a single slit 300 nm wide and strike a screen 24.0 cm away. At angles of ±20.0° from the center of the diffraction pattern, no electrons hit the screen, but electrons hit at all points closer to the center. a. How fast were these el

> a. What is the energy of a photon that has wavelength 0.10 µm? b. Through approximately what potential difference must electrons be accelerated so that they will exhibit wave nature in passing through a pinhole 0.10 µm in diameter? What is the speed of

> A large cavity that has a very small hole and is maintained at a temperature T is a good approximation to an ideal radiator or blackbody. Radiation can pass into or out of the cavity only through the hole. The cavity is a perfect absorber, since any radi

> What must be the temperature of an ideal blackbody so that photons of its radiated light having the peak-intensity wavelength can excite the electron in the Bohr-model hydrogen atom from the ground level to the n = 4 energy level?

> Light from an ideal spherical blackbody 15.0 cm in diameter is analyzed by using a diffraction grating that has 3850 lines/cm. When you shine this light through the grating, you observe that the peak-intensity wavelength forms a first-order bright fringe

> You’ve entered a survival contest that will include building a crude telescope. You are given a large box of lenses. Which two lenses do you pick? How do you quickly identify them?

> The star Betelgeuse has a surface temperature of 3000 K and is 600 times the diameter of our sun. (If our sun were that large, we would be inside it!) Assume that it radiates like an ideal blackbody. a. If Betelgeuse were to radiate all of its energy at

> Take 380–750 nm to be the wavelength range of the visible spectrum. a. What are the largest and smallest photon energies for visible light? b. The lowest six energy levels of the one-electron He+ ion are given in Fig. 39.27. For these

> A sample of hydrogen atoms is irradiated with light with wavelength 85.5 nm, and electrons are observed leaving the gas. a. If each hydrogen atom were initially in its ground level, what would be the maximum kinetic energy in electron volts of these pho

> Can the first type of helium-ion microscope, used for surface imaging, produce helium ions with a wavelength of 0.1 pm? a. Yes; the voltage required is 21 kV. b. Yes; the voltage required is 42 kV. c. No; a voltage higher than 50 kV is required. d. N

> How does the wavelength of a helium ion compare to that of an electron accelerated through the same potential difference? a. The helium ion has a longer wavelength, because it has greater mass. b. The helium ion has a shorter wavelength, because it has

> In the second type of helium-ion microscope, a 1.2-MeV ion passing through a cell loses 0.2 MeV per µm of cell thickness. If the energy of the ion can be measured to 6 keV, what is the smallest difference in thickness that can be discerned? a. 0.03 µm;

> Why is it easier to use helium ions rather than neutral helium atoms in such a microscope? a. Helium atoms are not electrically charged, and only electrically charged particles have wave properties. b. Helium atoms form molecules, which are too large t

> a. What accelerating potential is needed to produce electrons of wavelength 5.00 nm? b. What would be the energy of photons having the same wavelength as these electrons? c. What would be the wavelength of photons having the same energy as the electron

> a. If a photon and an electron each have the same energy of 20.0 eV, find the wavelength of each. b. If a photon and an electron each have the same wavelength of 250 nm, find the energy of each. c. You want to study an organic molecule that is about 25

> An atom in a metastable state has a lifetime of 5.2 ms. What is the uncertainty in energy of the metastable state?

> A small tropical fish is at the center of a water-filled, spherical fish bowl 28.0 cm in diameter. a. Find the apparent position and magnification of the fish to an observer outside the bowl. The effect of the thin walls of the bowl may be ignored. b.

> a. The x-coordinate of an electron is measured with an uncertainty of 0.30 mm. What is the x-component of the electron’s velocity, vx , if the minimum percent uncertainty in a simultaneous measurement of vx is 1.0%? b. Repeat part (a) for a proton.

> A scientist has devised a new method of isolating individual particles. He claims that this method enables him to detect simultaneously the position of a particle along an axis with a standard deviation of 0.12 nm and its momentum component along this ax

> A 10.0-g marble is gently placed on a horizontal tabletop that is 1.75 m wide. a. What is the maximum uncertainty in the horizontal position of the marble? b. According to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, what is the minimum uncertainty in the hor

> A pesky 1.5-mg mosquito is annoying you as you attempt to study physics in your room, which is 5.0 m wide and 2.5 m high. You decide to swat the bothersome insect as it flies toward you, but you need to estimate its speed to make a successful hit. a. Wh

> The brightest star in the sky is Sirius, the Dog Star. It is actually a binary system of two stars, the smaller one (Sirius B) being a white dwarf. Spectral analysis of Sirius B indicates that its surface temperature is 24,000 K and that it radiates ener

> Two stars, both of which behave like ideal blackbodies, radiate the same total energy per second. The cooler one has a surface temperature T and a diameter 3.0 times that of the hotter star. a. What is the temperature of the hotter star in terms of T?

> Radiation has been detected from space that is characteristic of an ideal radiator at T = 2.728 K. (This radiation is a relic of the Big Bang at the beginning of the universe.) For this temperature, at what wavelength does the Planck distribution peak? I

> Determine λm , the wavelength at the peak of the Planck distribution, and the corresponding frequency ƒ, at these temperatures: a. 3.00 K; b. 300 K; c. 3000 K.

> A 100-W incandescent light bulb has a cylindrical tungsten filament 30.0 cm long, 0.40 mm in diameter, and with an emissivity of 0.26. a. What is the temperature of the filament? b. For what wavelength does the spectral emittance of the bulb peak? c.

> Figure 39.19a shows the energy levels of the sodium atom. The two lowest excited levels are shown in columns labeled 2P3/2 and 2P1/2. Find the ratio of the number of atoms in a 2P3/2 state to the number in a 2P1/2 state for a sodium gas in thermal equili

> If a piece of photographic film is placed at the location of a real image, the film will record the image. Can this be done with a virtual image? How might one record a virtual image?

> A candle 4.85 cm tall is 39.2 cm to the left of a plane mirror. Where is the image formed by the mirror, and what is the height of this image?

> A large number of neon atoms are in thermal equilibrium. What is the ratio of the number of atoms in a 5s state to the number in a 3p state at a. 300 K; b. 600 K; c. 1200 K? The energies of these states, relative to the ground state, are E5s = 20.66 e

> Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) is a laser-based surgical procedure that corrects near- and farsightedness by removing part of the lens of the eye to change its curvature and hence focal length. This procedure can remove layers 0.25 µm thick using puls

> How many photons per second are emitted by a 7.50-mW CO2 laser that has a wavelength of 10.6 µm?

> Pulsed dye lasers emit light of wavelength 585 nm in 0.45-ms pulses to remove skin blemishes such as birthmarks. The beam is usually focused onto a circular spot 5.0 mm in diameter. Suppose that the output of one such laser is 20.0 W. a. What is the ene

> Using a mixture of CO2, N2, and sometimes He, CO2 lasers emit a wavelength of 10.6 mm. At power outputs of 0.100 kW, such lasers are used for surgery. How many photons per second does a CO2 laser deliver to the tissue during its use in an operation?

> Use Balmer’s formula to calculate a. the wavelength, b. the frequency, and c. the photon energy for the Hg line of the Balmer series for hydrogen.

> a. An atom initially in an energy level with E = -6.52 eV absorbs a photon that has wavelength 860 nm. What is the internal energy of the atom after it absorbs the photon? b. An atom initially in an energy level with E = -2.68 eV emits a photon that has

> In a set of experiments on a hypothetical one electron atom, you measure the wavelengths of the photons emitted from transitions ending in the ground level (n = 1), as shown in the energy-level diagram in Fig. E39.27. You also observe that it takes 17.50

> a. For one-electron ions with nuclear charge Z, what is the speed of the electron in a Bohr-model orbit labeled with n? Give your answer in terms of v1, the orbital speed for the n = 1 Bohr orbit in hydrogen. b. What is the largest value of Z for which

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