Lecture 26
Lecture 26
Blackbody Radiation
(Ch. 7)
This fact leads to the concept of photons as quanta of the electromagnetic field. The
state of the el.-mag. field is specified by the number n for each of the modes, or, in other
words, by enumerating the number of photons with each frequency.
However, we cannot use the usual expression for the chemical potential, because one
cannot increase N (i.e., add photons to the system) at constant volume and at the same
time keep the temperature constant: F
- does not exist for the photon gas
N T ,V
G N F F T ,V
Instead, we can use G F PV P
V T V
- by increasing the volume at T=const, we proportionally scale F
n ph f ph , T
1 1 Planck’s distribution provides the average
h
exp 1 exp 1 number of photons in a single mode of
B
k T k BT frequency = /h.
h
n h
The average energy in the mode: h
exp 1
B
k T
1 4 / 3 k 3 k 3 volume k3
N k G k
8 6 2 6 2
kx
Lx Ly Lz
ky dG 3 2
g cp ck G g 3D
d 6 2 c 2 2 c
3 ph 3
h g( ) n( )
n( )
h g( )
8 2
g ph 3
3D
c
3
=
- the spectral density of the
8 h 3
us , T h g f 3 black-body radiation
c exp h 1 (the Plank’s radiation law)
d
u as a function of the energy: u , T d u , T d u , T u , T u h , T h
d
8 3
u , T
hc 3 exp
1
B
k T
8 h 3 8 2
us , T 3
- purely classical result (no h), can be
3 k BT
c exp h 1 c obtained directly from equipartition
Rayleigh-Jeans Law
8 k BT
u , T large 1
4
4
High limit, Wien’s Displacement Law
At high frequencies/low temperatures: h 1 exp h 1 exp h
8 h 3
u s , T exp h Nobel 1911
c3
The maximum of u() shifts toward higher frequencies with increasing temperature. The
position of maximum: 3
h
du d B k T 3x 2 x 3e x
const const x 2
0
d h
d
h
exp 1 e 1 x
e 1
max 2.8
k BT k BT k BT
h
3 x e x 3 x 2.8
T = 300 K max 10 m
hc
max 0.5 m
5 k BT
2 5 k B
4
the Stefan-Boltzmann 4 4 the Stefan-
constant u T T Boltzmann Law
15h 3c 2 c
uT 8 5 k BT hc 4
4 3
The average energy per photon: k BT 2.7 k BT
15hc 8 k BT 2.4 15 2.4
3 3
N
(just slightly less than the “most” probable energy)
For the “uni-directional” motion, the flux of energy per unit area c u T
energy density u
1m2
c 1s
2 5 k B
4
15h 3c 2 m2K 4
This result is consistent with the flux of the solar radiation energy received by the Earth
(1370 W/m2) being multiplied by the area of a sphere with radius 1.5·1011 m (Sun-Earth
distance).
4
P 4 RSun
2 hc
2
4 7 108 m 5.7 10 8 2 4 5,740K 4 3.8 10 26 W
W
2.8 k B max mK
dm P 3.8 1026 W
the mass loss per one second 2 4.2 10 9
kg/s
dt c 3 10 m
8
2
0.01M 2 1028 kg
1% of Sun’s mass will be lost in t 4.7 1018 s 1.5 1011 yr
dm / dt 4.2 10 kg/s
9
Dewar
Radiative Energy Transfer
Liquid nitrogen and helium are stored in a vacuum or Dewar flask, a
container surrounded by a thin evacuated jacket. While the thermal
conductivity of gas at very low pressure is small, energy can still be
transferred by radiation. Both surfaces, cold and warm, radiate at a rate:
J rad 1 r Ti
4 i=a for the outer (hot) wall, i=b for the inner (cold) wall,
W / m2
r – the coefficient of reflection, (1-r) – the coefficient of emission
1 r
The net ingoing flux: J J
1 r
Ta4 Tb4
If r=0.98 (walls are covered with silver mirror), the net flux is reduced to 1% of the
value it would have if the surfaces were black bodies (r=0).
Superinsulation
Two parallel black planes are at the temperatures T1 and T2 respectively. The
energy flux between these planes in vacuum is due to the blackbody
radiation. A third black plane is inserted between the other two and is allowed
to come to an equilibrium temperature T3. Find T3 , and show that the energy
flux between planes 1 and 2 is cut in half because of the presence of the third
plane. T1 T3 T2
Without the third plane, the energy flux per unit area is:
J 0 T1 T2
4 4
The equilibrium temperature of the third plane can be found from the energy balance:
1/ 4
T14 T3 4 T3 4 T2 4 T1 T2 2T3
4 4 4 T14 T2 4
T3
2
The energy flux between the 1st and 2nd planes in the presence of the third plane:
J T1 T3
4 4
4 T14 T2 4 1
T1 1
T14 T2 4 J 0
2
- cut in half
2 2
Superinsulation: many layers of aluminized Mylar foil loosely
wrapped around the helium bath (in a vacuum space between the
walls of a LHe cryostat). The energy flux reduction for N heat
shields: J0
JN
N 1
The Greenhouse Effect
Absorption:
2
4 R
Power in RE TSun Sun
2
Rorbit
the flux of the solar radiation energy
received by the Earth ~ 1370 W/m2
Power out 4 RE TE
2 4
Emission:
1/ 4
R 2
TE Sun TSun
4 Rorbit
= 1 – TEarth = 280K
In reality = 0.7 – TEarth = 256K
To maintain a comfortable temperature on the
Earth, we need the Greenhouse Effect !
This equation holds for all T (it agrees with c T 16V 16
T T
S T V
c 0
the Nernst theorem), and we can integrate it dT T 2
dT VT 3
1 1 1
In terms of the average
PV U V n V n 2.7k BT 0.9 N k BT
density of phonons: 3 3 3
Radiation in the Universe
Approximately 98% of all the photons
emitted since the Big Bang are observed
now in the submillimeter/THz range.
A. Penzias
R. Wilson
Nobel 1978
16
S T VT 3 const
3c
Since V R3, the isentropic expansion
leads to :
T R 1
“… for their
CMBR (cont.) discovery of the
blackbody form and
anisotropy of the
CMBR”.
Mather, Smoot, Nobel 2006
(c) the maxima u(λ,T) and u(,T) do not correspond to the same photon energy. The
reason of that is
d c 8 hc
u , T d u , T d 1
d u , T
2 5 hc
exp 1
B
k T
Problem 2006 (blackbody radiation)
(d) (15) What is approximately the number of CMBR photons hitting the earth per
second per square meter [i.e. photons/(s·m2)]?
(d)
4
J TCMBR 5.7 108 W / K 4 m2 2.7 K 4 3 106W / m2
4
uT 8 5 k BT hc 4
4 3
k BT 2.7 k BT
15hc 8 k BT 2.4 15 2.4
3 3
N
W
J 2
photons m 3 106 16 photons
N 3 10
s m2 J 2.7 1.38 1023 2.7 s m2