Question
Question: Calculate the wavelength, in meters, of radiation with a frequency of \(1.18 \times {10^{14}}{s^{ - ...
Calculate the wavelength, in meters, of radiation with a frequency of 1.18×1014s−1. What region of the electromagnetic spectrum is this?
Solution
The relationship between the wavelength and frequency of a radiation is depicted by a simple equation which includes the wavelength term, the frequency term and a constant term which connects them. On substituting the value for wavelength term in the equation, we can obtain the value of frequency, and vice versa.
Complete answer:
Wavelength is the distance between two adjacent crests or troughs of a wave. The wave can be an electromagnetic wave, sound wave et cetera. The SI unit of wavelength is metre (m).
Frequency is the number of waves that pass through a given point in unit time. The SI unit of frequency is Hertz (Hz). It is also measured in s−1.
The equation that relates frequency with wavelength is as follows:
c=νλ
Where,
λ is the wavelength of the wave,
ν is the frequency of the wave,
c is the speed of light in vacuum. It has a constant value, c=3×108ms−1.
In the question, we are given that the frequency of the radiation is 1.18×1014s−1. The wavelength of the radiation is calculated as:
λ=νc
λ=1.18×1014s−13×108ms−1
=2.54×10−6m
This lies in the Infrared (IR) region (10−6morμm) of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Note:
The electromagnetic spectrum is the range of increasing wavelengths or decreasing frequencies of electromagnetic waves arranged in order. The order of the series is as follows: Gamma rays, X-rays, UV- rays, Visible spectrum, Infrared, Microwaves and Radio waves. Electromagnetic radiation can be expressed in terms of energy, wavelength, or frequency.