I recently had this question on a quiz, and I'm trying to correct it in order to do well on my upcoming test. The problem is that I don't know what answer to aim for... here's the question:
"Paige has mistakenly placed a fork in the microwave. When she turns it on, electrons begin to be ejected from the surface of the steel fork. Making the best of a bad situation, she decides to calculate the wavelength of one of the ejected electrons. She determines that its kinetic energy is 2.77x10^-15 Joules. What is the wavelength of this electron? "
My chem teacher wrote this next to my original (wrong) soultion where I had tried to do it using the photon equation:
wavelength = h/mv <== v= SQRT(2ke/m)
(I have written out the symbols I cannot type)
I tried it using this new equation and got 9.33x10^-12 meters. Is this correct? If not, what should I have done?
EDIT -
My test is tomorrow and I'm worried about it, so I'd REALLY appreciate even the slightest bit of help. Thanks!