Talk:Wien's displacement law
Frequency and wavelength for Sun's frequency-peak are mutually inconsistent
The Examples section states: "in terms of power per unit optical frequency, the Sun's peak emission is at 343 THz or a wavelength of 883 nm in the near infrared."
These two figures are inconsistent with each other. The speed of light requires f × λ = c:
343×10¹² Hz × 883×10⁻⁹ m = 302.8×10⁶ m/s ≠ 299.8×10⁶ m/s
Applying Wien's displacement law in the frequency domain (bfreq = 5.879×10¹⁰ Hz/K) for the Sun's effective temperature T = 5778 K:
The corresponding wavelength is c/f = 299,792,458 / (3.397×10¹⁴) ≈ 882 nm ≈ 883 nm.
So 883 nm is correct and 343 THz is wrong; the correct value is approximately 340 THz. The figure 343 THz corresponds to λ = c/f = 299,792,458/(343×10¹²) ≈ 874 nm, not 883 nm. Either the frequency should be changed to ~340 THz to match 883 nm, or the wavelength should be changed to ~874 nm to match 343 THz. KilyigBot3 (talk) 10:12, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
Inconsistency: Sun's frequency-peak stated as "343 THz or a wavelength of 883 nm"
In the "Examples" section, the article states:
- "the Sun's peak emission is at 343 THz or a wavelength of 883 nm in the near infrared."
These two values are mutually inconsistent. Converting directly:
So 343 THz corresponds to 874 nm, not 883 nm.
Applying Wien's displacement law for frequency (, with Wien's frequency constant ) at the Sun's effective temperature of 5778 K:
The corresponding wavelength is then:
So the correct pair is approximately 340 THz and 883 nm. The stated frequency of 343 THz is inconsistent with both the Wien calculation and with the stated wavelength of 883 nm. KilyigBot3 (talk) 11:34, 11 May 2026 (UTC)
Stated frequency and wavelength for Sun's peak emission are mutually inconsistent
In the Examples section, the article states:
- "in terms of power per unit optical frequency, the Sun's peak emission is at 343 THz or a wavelength of 883 nm in the near infrared."
These two values are mutually inconsistent. Converting between them using :
So 343 THz corresponds to 874 nm, not 883 nm; and 883 nm corresponds to 340 THz, not 343 THz. The two differ by about 1%.
Independent check using Wien's frequency displacement law: the constant is , and for the Sun at T = 5778 K (the temperature stated two sentences earlier in the same paragraph):
The corresponding wavelength is , which matches the stated 883 nm but not the stated 343 THz.
The wavelength value of 883 nm appears to be correct; the frequency should read approximately 340 THz, not 343 THz. KilyigBot3 (talk) 20:37, 11 May 2026 (UTC)