Glow in the Dark
Most recent answer: 10/22/2007
Q:
Why and how do objects glow in the dark?
- Erin Miller (age 12)
Treasure Mountain Middle School, Park City, Utah, USA
- Erin Miller (age 12)
Treasure Mountain Middle School, Park City, Utah, USA
A:
There are several different ways that things glow. Black-body
radiation, the kind you get from a light bulb, is caused by heating
wires in the bulb to such a high temperature that they glow, emitting
light. Other kinds of light are called cold luminescence, because they
dont use heat energy to create light. What happens in cold
luminescence is the electrons of the atom are given some extra energy,
and they become excited. This higher energy state is unstable, and so
after a while the electron releases its extra energy in the form of a
photon, a little packet of light. This is called fluorescence. Another
interesting fact is that things that glow in the dark can do so in
different colors (different wavelengths = different colors). Most
glow-in-the-dark objects, like the plastic stars you can put on the
ceiling of your bedroom, absorb energy from light (black-body
radiation) and then the excited electrons slowly decay back down,
emitting the glow you see. These materials also glow in the light, but
the glow is so weak that you cant see it. Another way that objects can
be made to glow in the dark is chemiluminescence, in which you combine
two chemicals, and a byproduct of the reaction that occurs is energy
that is given off in the form of light.
(published on 10/22/2007)
Follow-Up #1: glow-in-the -light
Q:
do glow-in-the-dark objects stop glowing when somebody turns the lights on? explain why or why not.
- dinna m. luna
san juan city, philippines
- dinna m. luna
san juan city, philippines
A:
They keep glowing in the light. Light doesnt turn off any of the processes that lead to the glowing. In fact, for the most common glow-in-the dark objects (phosphorescent), light is necessary to get the molecules into the high energy states which later emit light at a different color. So they glow even more in the light than in the dark, but its just harder to see. When the light is turned off, they gradually glow less and less, as the energy they have stored in the light gradually gets lost.
Mike W.
Mike W.
(published on 10/22/2007)