So there are 10 carbon-carbon bonds and one carbon-oxygen bond.
We are going to pretend that each of these internuclear bonds have a length of 140 picometers.
So 11 x 140 picometers ≈ 1 x 10
-9 meters, which was the value I used in my calculations.
So:
[tex]\Delta E_{6 \rightarrow 7} = \frac{13 \times (6.626 \times 10^{-34} \ \frac{J}{s})^2 }{8 \ (9.11 \times 10^{-31}\ Kg) \ (1 \times 10^{-9} \ m)^2}[/tex]
Then I'll just use my calculator to get the value of ΔE.
I hope I'm doing this correctly.
Approach seems OK to answer part 1.
Oh, I totally forgot question number 2!
Let's see... I know that:
[tex]\Delta E \ = h \nu [/tex]
To calculate the frequency, I simply have to use this formula:
[tex]\nu \ = \frac{ \Delta E_{6 \rightarrow 7}}{h}[/tex]
Is this approach correct?