Physics, asked by jeevi8751, 1 month ago

At what temperature can it be expected with a 10% probability that electrons in silver have an energy which is 1% above the fermi energy. The Fermi energy of silver is 5.5 eV​

Answers

Answered by hemakumar0116
1

Answer:

(EF = 5.5 eV).

Explanation:

At what temperature can we anticipate a 10% chance that electrons in silver have an energy that is 1% more than the Fermi energy? ( E F = 5.5 e V )

( E F = 5.5 e V ). Is the correct answer of this question .

The fermi energy is equal to 5.5 electron balls. So, using our calculator, we get 581 Kelvin for you. So there you have it, a solution to this problem.

The likelihood of detecting electrons is 0 in the conduction band and 0.5 at the Fermi level.

Formula: Ef = 2 * kf2 / (2 * m) Fermi energy vf = * kf / m is the Fermi velocity. Tf = Ef / k Fermi temperature

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