Is the energy of the photon coming in greater than or less than the energy of the electronic transition?

1 Answer
Jun 22, 2017

Neither. It has the energy given by the difference in energy, #E_f - E_i#.


When photons are absorbed to excite an electron from initial energy #E_i# to final energy #E_f#, they must account for the difference in energy, #DeltaE = E_f - E_i# in order for the electron to transition upwards by that energy.

Suppose you wanted to go from #E_1# to #E_2# in the hydrogen atom. Then,

#E_"photon" = DeltaE = -"13.6 eV"(1/2^2 - 1/1^2)#

would be the energy that the one absorbed photon needs to be in order to get the electron from #n = 1# (where #E_1 = -"13.6 eV"#) to #n = 2# (where #E_2 = -"3.4 eV"#).

http://astro.unl.edu/

If you had #"13.6 eV"# for that photon, you wouldn't be going from #E_1# to #E_2#; you'd be going way past that, since the difference is only #+"10.2 eV"#. And since the difference is that, you can't have #"3.4 eV"# available and bridge that gap.