robertdapice
New Member
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2003
- Messages
- 15
Yes, it's true, some of the physics syllabus is effectively retarded.
I am speaking through the blinding frustration of summarising the unit 'From ideas to Implementation' for my 3rd assessment block starting on monday.
Anywho, this:
"Indentify Plancks hypothesis that radiation emitted and absorbed by the walls of a black body cavity is quantised."
If anyone understands this, and I mean REALLY understands it, please, fill me in. I understand what a black body is, how as temperature increases, wavelength of emitted waves becomes shorter and intensity becomes higher.
But does this 'max out'? Does the intensity only get so high (as a certain temperature), and then suddenly, the intensity begins to lower again?
My text book is fuzzy, and I've read several sources on the net. Plus, my teacher is useless.
Further, the text book doesn't explain why quantum theory satisfies this pattern, but classical physics doesn't.
The description of a 'black box cavity' is also relatively vague.
How frustrating.
Any help would be appreciated!
Rob
BTW: I do know that the keyword is 'identify', but I really feel like knowing this - that's the problem with this ridiculous course.
I am speaking through the blinding frustration of summarising the unit 'From ideas to Implementation' for my 3rd assessment block starting on monday.
Anywho, this:
"Indentify Plancks hypothesis that radiation emitted and absorbed by the walls of a black body cavity is quantised."
If anyone understands this, and I mean REALLY understands it, please, fill me in. I understand what a black body is, how as temperature increases, wavelength of emitted waves becomes shorter and intensity becomes higher.
But does this 'max out'? Does the intensity only get so high (as a certain temperature), and then suddenly, the intensity begins to lower again?
My text book is fuzzy, and I've read several sources on the net. Plus, my teacher is useless.
Further, the text book doesn't explain why quantum theory satisfies this pattern, but classical physics doesn't.
The description of a 'black box cavity' is also relatively vague.
How frustrating.
Any help would be appreciated!
Rob
BTW: I do know that the keyword is 'identify', but I really feel like knowing this - that's the problem with this ridiculous course.
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