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Estimating the following two numbers should be interesting. The number of photons entering the pupil of our eye per second corresponding to the minimum intensity of white light that we humans - Physics

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Question

Estimating the following two numbers should be interesting. The first number will tell you why radio engineers do not need to worry much about photons! The second number tells you why our eye can never ‘count photons’, even in barely detectable light.

The number of photons entering the pupil of our eye per second corresponding to the minimum intensity of white light that we humans can perceive (∼10−10 W m−2). Take the area of the pupil to be about 0.4 cm2, and the average frequency of white light to be about 6 × 1014 Hz.

Numerical

Solution

Intensity of light perceived by the human eye, I = 10−10 W m−2

Area of a pupil, A = 0.4 cm= 0.4 × 10−4 m2

Frequency of white light, v = 6 × 1014 Hz

The energy emitted by a photon is given as:

E = hv

Where,

h = Planck’s constant = 6.6 × 10−34 Js

∴ E = 6.6 × 10−34 × 6 × 1014

= 3.96 × 10−19 J

Let n be the total number of photons falling per second, per unit area of the pupil.

The total energy per unit for n falling photons is given as:

E = n × 3.96 × 10−19 J s−1 m−2

The energy per unit area per second is the intensity of light.

∴ E = I

n × 3.96 × 10−19 = 10−10

`"n" = 10^(-10)/(3.96 xx 10^(-19))`

= 2.52 × 108 m2 s−1

The total number of photons entering the pupil per second is given as:

n= n × A

= 2.52 × 10× 0.4 × 10−4

= 1.008 × 104 s−1

This number is not as large as the one found in problem (a), but it is large enough for the human eye to never see the individual photons.

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Particle Nature of Light: The Photon
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Chapter 11: Dual Nature of Radiation and Matter - Exercise [Page 409]

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NCERT Physics [English] Class 12
Chapter 11 Dual Nature of Radiation and Matter
Exercise | Q 11.25 (b) | Page 409
NCERT Physics [English] Class 12
Chapter 11 Dual Nature of Radiation and Matter
Exercise | Q 25.2 | Page 409

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