Physics, asked by AlwaysFeelingAlone, 1 year ago

What is Raman effect?


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Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4
a change of wavelength exhibited by some of the radiation scattered in a medium. The effect is specific to the molecules which cause it, and so can be used in spectroscopic analysis.

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Answered by AnIntrovert
22

\large\red{\bf{\underline{\underline {Raman\: Effect \: Light \: scattering}}}}

It is a phenomenon in which change in the wavelength of light occurs when a beam of light is deflected by molecules. When a beam of light travels from a dust-free transparent sample of a chemical compound, then a small fraction of the light emerges in the direction other than that of the incident light. Most of the scattered light wavelength is unchanged and in small part, if the wavelength is different from that of incident light it is due to Raman Effect.

Awards which were won by CV Raman are:

Fellow of the Royal Society (1924), Knight Bachelor (1929), Nobel Prize in Physics (1930), Bharat Ratna (1954), Lenin Peace Prize (1957) and Fellow of the Royal Society (1924).

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