Physics Class 11
Physics Class 11
• Electric Discharge:
The passage of an electric current through a gas is called electric discharge.
• Discharge Tube:
A hard glass tube along with the necessary arrangement, which is used to study the
passage of electric discharge through gases at low pressure, is called a discharge tube.
• Cathode Rays:
Cathode rays are the stream of negatively charged particles, electrons which are shot out
at a high speed from the cathode of a discharge tube at pressure below 0.01 mm of Hg.
• Work Function:
The minimum amount of energy required by an electron to just escape from the metal
surface is known as work function of the metal.
W0 = φ0 = hv0
• Electron Emission:
Field electron emission (also known as field emission(FE) and electron field emission)
is emission of electrons induced by an electrostatic field. The most common context is
field emission from a solid surface into vacuum.
• Thermionic Emission:
Here electrons are emitted from the metal surface with the help of thermal energy.
• Field or Cold Cathode Emission:
Electrons are emitted from a metal surface by subjecting it to a very high electric field.
• Photoelectric Emission:
Electrons emitted from a metal surface with the help of suitable electromagnetic
radiations.
• Secondary Emission:
Electrons are ejected from a metal surface by striking over its fast moving electrons.
• Forces Experienced by an Electron in Electric and Magnetic Fields:
a) Electric field: The force FE experienced by an electron e in an electric field of
strength (intensity) E is given by,
FE = eE
b) Magnetic field: The force experienced by an electron e in a magnetic field of strength
B weber/m2 is given by
FB=Bev
where v is the velocity with which the electron moves in the electric field and the
magnetic field, perpendicular to the direction of motion.
c) If the magnetic field is parallel to the direction of motion of electron, then, FB = 0.
• Photoelectric Effect:
• Threshold Frequency:
The minimum value of the frequency of incident radiation below which the photoelectric
emission stops altogether is called threshold frequency.
• Laws of Photoelectric Effect:
a) For a given metal and a radiation of fixed frequency, the number of photoelectrons
emitted is proportional to the intensity of incident radiation.
b) For every metal, there is a certain minimum frequency below which no
photoelectrons are emitted, howsoever high is the intensity of incident radiation.
This frequency is called threshold frequency.
c) For the radiation of frequency higher than the threshold frequency, the maximum
kinetic energy of the photoelectrons is directly proportional to the frequency of
incident radiation and is independent of the intensity of incident radiation.
d) The photoelectric emission is an instantaneous process.