-- The energy of one photon is <em>(h · frequency of the light)</em>
' h ' is 6.626 × 10⁻³⁴ m²-kg/s ("Planck's Constant")
-- The question doesn't tell you the frequency of the light from the LED, but it tells you the wavelength, and
<em>Frequency = (speed of light) / (wavelength) </em>.
-- Now you have everything you need to calculate the <em>energy carried by one photon from the LED</em>.
-- The power of the light from the LED is 120 milliwatts. That's <em>0.120 Joule of energy per second</em>.
Now you should be able to find the number of photons per second. It's going to be <em>(0.120 Joule) / (energy carried by one photon)</em> .
When I scribbled it out on a scrap of scratch paper, I got 3.853 x 10³⁸ photons, but you'd better really check that out.
200J
Explanation:
Change in the internet energy = Heat aborsbed - work done
800 - 600
200 J
Answer:
The kinetic energy of the cell phone is 9J
Explanation:
The kinetic energy is the energy possessed by a body by virtue of motion.
The kinetic energy is expressed as
KE= 1/2m(v)²
Given data
Mass of cell phone m= 80g--to kg=80/1000= 0.08kg
Velocity of cell phone v= 15m/s
Substituting our given data we have
KE= 1/2*0.08(15)²
KE= (0.08*225)/2
KE=18/2
KE= 9J
To find the volume, multiply them all together: (height x width x length)
18 x 19 x 20 = 6840cm³