- #1
GuillemVS
- 12
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- TL;DR Summary
- In how many ways can electrons go back to ground state?
Mainly I want to know the following thing: electrons when excited they tend to want to go back to ground state, right? One way is by photons, but how does that work? Accelerating charges creates EM waves, but in this case there was no acceleration, right? Or is the term accelerating only a way to say from high to normal (as we say that they "move a level of energy" when they don't physically move, they just have more energy than normal).
Another thing that I've read is the photoelectric phenomenon (is that how is called?), can excited electrons produce other electrons? As they produce photons, right? I think I read that they can, but then how can you get to choose wether if they are going to create a photon or a electron? For example: a metal receives all the lights and "makes sure" to create a electric field opposite (to neutralize) the EM wave's electric field, ending with the light (so no light that's going to go through the metal, right?). But also, electrons absorb light, do they? Or they just want to overcome the electric field, or both at the same time?
The magnetic field will keep moving? Or it will be absorbed by the metal too?
Another different but similar question: objects reflect light that is of the same color, right? Then it means that electrons gets to "choose" wether if to throw the photon or create heat? But... Isn't heat a infrared photon? And how do they "choose" if that wavelength or frequency is the wanted as photon or not?
Hopefully I didn't miss understood everything so badly.
Thank you for reading, I will appreciate concrete answers.
Sorry if there are mistakes, I'm a non English phone writing curious person right now xD
Another thing that I've read is the photoelectric phenomenon (is that how is called?), can excited electrons produce other electrons? As they produce photons, right? I think I read that they can, but then how can you get to choose wether if they are going to create a photon or a electron? For example: a metal receives all the lights and "makes sure" to create a electric field opposite (to neutralize) the EM wave's electric field, ending with the light (so no light that's going to go through the metal, right?). But also, electrons absorb light, do they? Or they just want to overcome the electric field, or both at the same time?
The magnetic field will keep moving? Or it will be absorbed by the metal too?
Another different but similar question: objects reflect light that is of the same color, right? Then it means that electrons gets to "choose" wether if to throw the photon or create heat? But... Isn't heat a infrared photon? And how do they "choose" if that wavelength or frequency is the wanted as photon or not?
Hopefully I didn't miss understood everything so badly.
Thank you for reading, I will appreciate concrete answers.
Sorry if there are mistakes, I'm a non English phone writing curious person right now xD