Chemistry, asked by Anonymous, 7 months ago

What was the reason of the failure of Compton's effect?​

Answers

Answered by KrupaMohan14
1

Answer:

The compton effect (also known as compton scattering) is the result of a high-energy photon colliding with a target, which releases loosely bound electrons from the outer shell of the atom or molecule.

Explanation:

The accelerating electron then emits dipole radiation of the same frequency in various directions which constitutes scattering in the classical theory. ... This cannot be explained by the above Thomson scattering. It could only be explained by the quantum version of light and so Compton scattering became the answer.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

The compton effect (also known as compton scattering) is the result of a high-energy photon colliding with a target, which releases loosely bound electrons from the outer shell of the atom or molecule.

Explanation:

The accelerating electron then emits dipole radiation of the same frequency in various directions which constitutes scattering in the classical theory. ... This cannot be explained by the above Thomson scattering. It could only be explained by the quantum version of light and so Compton scattering became the answer.

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