When photons hit metals, does the electron created go in a random direction?

In summary, in the photoelectric effect, photons can generate electrons in a metal surface, but it is not a mechanical process like a bullet hitting a wall. The direction of the electrons is random due to the uncertainty principle and quantum randomness. In solar cells, the electron direction is also random, but in the opposite direction when creating light by forcing an electron in an atom. When photons are created, their direction is also random, but it strongly depends on the photon energy. For low energy photons, the distribution is nearly uniform, while for high energy photons, the scattered electrons follow the direction of the photon. The border between these two behaviors is not well-defined.
  • #1
Jarfi
384
12
Some metals generate electrons when photons hit them, If so then what direction will the electron go into, will it be random and the uncertainty principle and quantum randomness. Or will it go in a direction relative to the point of impact from the photon, So if you shot a photon at an atom, Would the electron come out the oposite site? or in the same direction as the photon came from?

Is it random or not?
 
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  • #2
I think you are visualising the event as being a bit like a bullet hitting a wall. That would tend to throw shards of wall off in the direction that the bullet might 'bounce off' (i.e. laws of reflection). I don't think that the photoelectric effect is quite so mechanical. afaik, the photon arrives and adds its energy to the total energy around the surface. One (lucky) electron which happens to be near the surface and already, perhaps, 'travelling outwards', can have its kinetic energy increased enough to escape with some extra KE. It is hardly like a coconut shy because the ball (photon) has no well defined size and many electrons (coconuts) occupy one wavelength of the incident light.

I guess someone must have done photo electric experiments and looked at the angular distribution of photoelectrons. The result would be interesting but i would predict that there would be a maximum intensity normal to the surface, rather than at the 'reflected angle'. (Momentum conservation is not violated as long as one considers the whole mass of metal as the target and not the individual photoelectron.)
 
  • #3
sophiecentaur said:
I think you are visualising the event as being a bit like a bullet hitting a wall. That would tend to throw shards of wall off in the direction that the bullet might 'bounce off' (i.e. laws of reflection). I don't think that the photoelectric effect is quite so mechanical. afaik, the photon arrives and adds its energy to the total energy around the surface. One (lucky) electron which happens to be near the surface and already, perhaps, 'travelling outwards', can have its kinetic energy increased enough to escape with some extra KE. It is hardly like a coconut shy because the ball (photon) has no well defined size and many electrons (coconuts) occupy one wavelength of the incident light.

I guess someone must have done photo electric experiments and looked at the angular distribution of photoelectrons. The result would be interesting but i would predict that there would be a maximum intensity normal to the surface, rather than at the 'reflected angle'. (Momentum conservation is not violated as long as one considers the whole mass of metal as the target and not the individual photoelectron.)

Well, the electron traveling near the surface is completely random in quantum mechanics so you are saying that the electrons created in solar sells go in a random direction, and also the opposite, when creating light by forcing an electron in an atom, does the photon go in a random direction? When photons are created do they go in a random direction?
 
  • #4
Jarfi said:
Well, the electron traveling near the surface is completely random in quantum mechanics so you are saying that the electrons created in solar sells go in a random direction, and also the opposite, when creating light by forcing an electron in an atom, does the photon go in a random direction? When photons are created do they go in a random direction?

The electrons in all solids have a range of energies, corresponding to KE in every direction. An electron in an isolated gas atom has no defined velocity - just an energy. An incident photon will merely raise its energy with respect to the nucleus (no direction is involved). At some later time, according to the probability situation, another photon will be emitted totally randomly. This is the basis of absorption spectroscopy, which shows dark bands where the light from one direction has been absorbed and re-radiated in all directions, leaving only a small amount of energy flowing in the original direction.
In a photo cell, the energy given by an incident photon will increase the total energy in part of the lattice, allowing electrons that happen to be in an appropriate state (a bit non-committal here, I'm afraid) to make it across the junction, against the potential difference. If an electron happens to gain energy to take it away from the junction, then I guess the photon energy is 'wasted'. This would imply a maximum efficiency of 50% and I wonder if this is actually the case. I must look into this. [edit: the pv description above is a bit over-simplified haha but again I don't think direction comes into it. The photon energy produces an electron-hole pair which causes a current to flow]
 
  • #5
The answer strongly depends on photon energy.

For photons in single eV range (visible light, near ultraviolet), the distribution is nearly uniform. (However it is not so easy to measure, as electrons of so low energies are vulnerable to even weakest electric fields, and we must use such fields to detect those electrons)
For energetic photons - keV-GeV (X-rays, gammas) - scattered electrons follow the direction of the hitting photon.

I would really like to know where the border between those two lies. I've never played with 100 eV or so photons...
 

Related to When photons hit metals, does the electron created go in a random direction?

1. What happens when a photon hits a metal?

When a photon hits a metal, it transfers its energy to the metal's atoms. This causes the electrons in the metal to absorb the energy and jump to a higher energy level, creating an excited electron.

2. How does the electron created by the photon behave?

The electron created by the photon behaves differently depending on the metal's properties. In some cases, it may be immediately ejected from the metal in a process called photoelectric effect. In other cases, it may remain bound to the metal and contribute to the overall conductivity of the material.

3. Is the direction of the electron's movement random?

The direction of the electron's movement is not entirely random. It is influenced by the angle of incidence of the photon, the properties of the metal, and the energy of the photon. However, there is an element of randomness due to the quantum nature of electron behavior.

4. Can the direction of the electron's movement be controlled?

The direction of the electron's movement can be influenced by changing the properties of the metal, such as its crystal structure or composition. However, it cannot be precisely controlled due to the inherent randomness of electron behavior at the quantum level.

5. How does the behavior of the electron differ from other particles?

The behavior of the electron created by a photon is unique because it is a charged particle. This means it can be influenced by electric and magnetic fields, which can alter its direction of movement. Other particles, such as neutrons, do not have this property and behave differently when interacting with metals.

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