University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780321973610
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Question
Chapter 40, Problem 40.54P
To determine
The width of the barrier with a height of
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
An electron with initial kinetic energy 5.5 eV encounters a square potential barrier of height 10.0 eV. What is the width of the barrier if the electron has a 0.50% probability of tunneling through the barrier?
4. A simple model of a radioactive nuclear decay assumes that alpha particles are trapped inside
a nuclear potential well. An alpha particle is a particle made out of two protons and two
neutrons and has a mass of 3.73 GeV/c². The nuclear potential can be modeled as a pair
of barriers each with a width of 2.0 fm and a height of 30.0 MeV. Find the probability for
an alpha particle to tunnel across one of the potential barriers if it has a kinetic energy of
20.0 MeV.
In a particular semiconductor device, electrons that are accelerated through a potential of 5 V attempt to tunnel through a barrier of width 0.8 nm and height 10 V. What fraction of the electrons are able to tunnel through the barrier if the potential is zero outside the barrier?
Chapter 40 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 40.1 - Does a wave packet given by Eq. (40.19) represent...Ch. 40.2 - Prob. 40.2TYUCh. 40.3 - Prob. 40.3TYUCh. 40.4 - Prob. 40.4TYUCh. 40.5 - Prob. 40.5TYUCh. 40.6 - Prob. 40.6TYUCh. 40 - Prob. 40.1DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.2DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.3DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.4DQ
Ch. 40 - If a panicle is in a stationary state, does that...Ch. 40 - Prob. 40.6DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.7DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.8DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.9DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.10DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.11DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.12DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.13DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.14DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.15DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.16DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.17DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.18DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.19DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.20DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.21DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.22DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.23DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.24DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.25DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.26DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.27DQCh. 40 - Prob. 40.1ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.2ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.3ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.4ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.5ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.6ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.7ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.8ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.9ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.10ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.11ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.12ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.13ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.14ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.15ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.16ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.17ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.18ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.19ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.20ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.21ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.22ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.23ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.24ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.25ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.26ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.27ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.28ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.29ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.30ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.31ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.32ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.33ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.34ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.35ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.36ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.37ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.38ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.39ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.40ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.41ECh. 40 - Prob. 40.42PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.43PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.44PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.45PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.46PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.47PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.48PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.49PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.50PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.51PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.52PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.53PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.54PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.55PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.56PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.57PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.58PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.59PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.60PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.61PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.62PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.63PCh. 40 - Prob. 40.64CPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.65CPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.66CPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.67PPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.68PPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.69PPCh. 40 - Prob. 40.70PP
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- A 2.0 eV electron encounters a barrier 5.0 eV high. What is the probability that it will tunnel through the barrier if the barrier width is (a) 1.00 nm and (b) 0.50 nm?arrow_forwardAn electron with total energy E = 5.0 eV approaches a rectangular potential energy barrier with U0 = 6.0 eV. What should the width L of the potential barrier be so that the probability of the electron crossing it is one in a million?arrow_forwardA particle with mass 2.5 × 10^(-27) kg and energy 4.0 eV approaches a potential barrier with a height of 2.5 eV and a width of 1.0 nm. Calculate the probability of the particle tunneling through the barrier.arrow_forward
- An electron possessing the kinetic energy E approaches a potential barrier of the height U = 2E and tunnels through it. What is the kinetic energy energy of the electron afterwards?arrow_forward(a) An electron with initial kinetic energy 32 eV encounters a square barrier with height 41 eV and width 0.25 nm. What is the probability that the electron will tunnel through the barrier? (b) A proton with the same kinetic energy encounters the same barrier. What is the probability that the proton will tunnel through the barrier?arrow_forwardA 1.2 eV electron has a 10^-4 probability of tunneling through a 2.3 eV potential barrier. What is the probability of a 1.2 eV proton tunneling through the same barrier?arrow_forward
- A stream of electrons, each with a kinetic energy of 450 eV, is sent through a potential-free region toward a potential barrier of "height" 500 eV and thickness 0.300 nm. The stream consists of 1 × 1015 electrons. How many should tunnel through the barrier? Pick the closest answer. The electron mass is 9.10938 x 10-31 kg. O 8 x 107 O 8 × 10⁹ 3 x 10³ 6 x 104 4x 107 4 x 105 O 1 x 106 O 7 x 104 Ⓒ 9 × 105 O 7 x 106arrow_forwardA stream of electrons is of energy E is incident on a potential barrier of height U and thickness d. Even though U >> E, 5% of the electrons tunnel through the barrier. If the thickness of the barrier decrease to 0.12 d, what percentage of the electrons will tunnel through?arrow_forwardElectron transfer between redox centers in proteins is controlled by quantum tunneling. We can model the region between two redox centers as an energy barrier which the electron must cross. If the distance between the redox centers is 0.752 nm and the energy of the electron is 0.976 eV lower than the height of the barrier, what is the probability that the electron will successfully cross to the next redox center?arrow_forward
- Physics A free electron has a kinetic energy 19.7eV and is incident on a potential energy barrier of U=29.7eV and width w=0.016nm. What is the probability for the electron to penetrate this barrier (in %)?arrow_forwardAn electron is incident on a potential-energy barrier of width L and height V = h2 /2meL2 Estimate the probability that the electron will tunnel through the barrier if it has an energy (a) V/10 and (b) V/100.arrow_forwardAn electron of energy 1 eV got trapped inside the surface of a metal. If the potential barrier is 4.0 eV and width of the barrier is 2 Angstrom, the probability of its transmission is, * O 0.01 0.09 0.5 0.085arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- University Physics Volume 3PhysicsISBN:9781938168185Author:William Moebs, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStaxPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningModern PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781111794378Author:Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. MoyerPublisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics Volume 3
Physics
ISBN:9781938168185
Author:William Moebs, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Modern Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781111794378
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. Moyer
Publisher:Cengage Learning