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Blackbody Radiation and Planck's Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET PDF Download

Motivation

  • The black body is importance in thermal radiation theory and practice.
  • The ideal black body notion is importance in studying thermal radiation and electromagnetic radiation transfer in all wavelength bands.

The black body is used as a standard with which the absorption of real bodies is compared.

 

Definition of a black body

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

A black body is an ideal body which allows the whole of the incident radiation to pass into itself ( without reflecting the energy ) and absorbs within itself this whole incident radiation (without passing on the energy). This propety is valid for radiation corresponding to all wavelengths and to all angels of incidence. Therefore, the black body is an ideal absorber of incident radaition.

 

Black--Body  Radiation  Laws  (1)

1- The Rayleigh-Jeans Law.

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

  • It agrees with experimental measurements for long wavelengths.
  • It predicts an energy output that diverges towards infinity as wavelengths grow smaller.
  • The failure has become known as the ultraviolet catastrophe. 

 

 

Ultraviolet Catastrophe

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

  • This formula also had a problem. The problem was the λ term in the denominator.
  • For large wavelengths it fitted the experimental data but it had major problems at shorter  wavelengths.


Body Radiation Laws (2)

2- Planck Law

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET
Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

  • We have two forms. As a function of wavelength. 

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

And as a function of frequency

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

The Planck Law gives a distribution that peaks at a certain wavelength, the peak shifts to shorter wavelengths for higher temperatures, and the area under the curve grows rapidly with increasing temperature.

 

Comparison between Classical and Quantum viewpoint

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

There is a good fit at long wavelengths, but at short wavlengths there is a major disagreement. Rayleigh-Jeans → , but Black-body   → 0

 

Black--Body  Radiation  Laws  (3)

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

3- Wein Displacement Law

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

 

  • It tells us as we heat an object up, its color changes from red to orange to white hot.
  • You can use this to calculate the temperature of stars.
  • The surface temperature of the Sun is 5778 K, this temperature corresponds to a peak emission = 502 nm = about 5000  Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET .
  • b is a constant of proportionality, called Wien's displacement constant and equals 2.897 768 5(51) x 10-3 m K = 2.897768 5(51) x 106 nm K.

 

Black--Body  Radiation  Laws  (4)

4- The Stefan-Boltzmann Law

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

  • Gives the total energy being emitted at all wavelengths by the blackbody (which is the area under the Planck Law curve).
  • Explains the growth in the height of the curve as the temperature increases. Notice that this growth is very abrupt
  • Sigma = 5.67 * 10-8 J s-1 m-2 K-4, Known as the Stefan- Boltzmann constant.

 

Black--Body  Radiation  Laws  (5)

 

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

Comparison of Rayleigh-Jeans law with Wien's law and Planck's law, for a body of 8 mK temperature.

 

Application for Black Body

  • The area of Earth's disk as viewed from space is, Area = nr2.
  • The total energy incident on Earth is, Incident energy = (nr2)So.

 

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

  • The energy absorbed by the Earth/atmosphere system, as viewed from space is
    Absorbed energy = (nr2)So(1 - A). As we know that bodies must be in radiative equilibrium. The solar energy striking Earth's disk as viewed from space is re-emitted as thermal radiation by the surface of the entire globe, as described by the Stefan-Boltzmann Law, Emitted energy = (4nr2)oT4.
  • Set the absorbed energy equal to the emitted energy:
    (nr2)So(1 - A) = (4nr2)oTE4, Solving for T yields: Te = [S0(1 - A)/(4ct)]<1,4)
    = [1370^(1 -0.3)/(4^5.67x10-8)](1,4) = 255 K.

 

Conclusion

  •  As the temperature increases, the peak wavelength emitted by the black body decreases.

Blackbody Radiation and Planck`s Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

  • As temperature increases, the total energy emitted increases, because the total area under the curve increases.
  • The curve gets infinitely close to the x-axis but never touches it.

 

Summary

  • A black body is a theoretical object that absorbs 100% of the radiation that hits it. Therefore it reflects no radiation and appears perfectly black.
  • Roughly we can say that the stars radiate like blackbody radiators. This is important because it means that we can use the theory for blackbody radiators to infer things about stars.
  • At a particular temperature the black body would emit the maximum amount of energy possible for that temperature.
  • Blackbody radiation does not depend on the type of object emitting it. Entire spectrum of blackbody radiation depends on only one parameter, the temperature, T.
The document Blackbody Radiation and Planck's Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET | Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET is a part of the Physics Course Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET.
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FAQs on Blackbody Radiation and Planck's Distribution Law - Thermodynamic and Statistical Physics, CSIR-NET - Physics for IIT JAM, UGC - NET, CSIR NET

1. What is blackbody radiation and how does it relate to Planck's distribution law?
Ans. Blackbody radiation refers to the electromagnetic radiation emitted by a perfect blackbody, which absorbs all incident radiation and does not reflect or transmit any. Planck's distribution law describes the intensity of this radiation as a function of wavelength or frequency. It states that the spectral radiance of blackbody radiation is proportional to the frequency raised to the power of three and divided by the exponential of the ratio of the frequency to the product of Planck's constant and the absolute temperature.
2. How is blackbody radiation explained by thermodynamics and statistical physics?
Ans. Thermodynamics explains blackbody radiation by considering the equilibrium between the radiation and the blackbody. It focuses on the macroscopic properties of the system, such as temperature and energy transfer. Statistical physics, on the other hand, provides a microscopic understanding of blackbody radiation by considering the behavior of a large number of particles (photons) that make up the radiation. It uses statistical methods to describe the distribution of energies among these particles and explains the observed features of blackbody radiation in terms of the statistical behavior of photons.
3. What are the applications of blackbody radiation and Planck's distribution law?
Ans. Blackbody radiation and Planck's distribution law have several important applications. They are used in fields such as astrophysics to study the thermal radiation emitted by celestial objects, in engineering to design and optimize energy-efficient devices like solar cells and light-emitting diodes, and in material science to analyze the thermal properties of materials. Additionally, they have played a crucial role in the development of quantum mechanics, as Planck's distribution law led to the concept of quantized energy levels.
4. How did Planck's distribution law revolutionize our understanding of physics?
Ans. Planck's distribution law revolutionized our understanding of physics by introducing the concept of quantized energy. Before its development, classical physics predicted that energy could be emitted or absorbed continuously, without any restrictions. However, Planck's law showed that energy exchange in blackbody radiation occurs in discrete packets or quanta, which are proportional to the frequency of the radiation. This discovery laid the foundation for the development of quantum mechanics and challenged the classical notion of continuous energy transfer.
5. How does Planck's distribution law explain the phenomenon of ultraviolet catastrophe?
Ans. The phenomenon of ultraviolet catastrophe refers to the failure of classical physics to accurately predict the intensity of blackbody radiation at high frequencies (short wavelengths). According to classical theory, the intensity of radiation should increase indefinitely as the frequency increases. However, Planck's distribution law successfully explained this phenomenon by introducing the concept of quantized energy. It showed that as the frequency increases, the energy of the radiation is partitioned into discrete quanta, preventing the infinite increase in intensity predicted by classical theory. Thus, Planck's distribution law resolved the ultraviolet catastrophe and provided a more accurate description of blackbody radiation.
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