Phosphorescence is the emission of a photon from the triplet state of a molecule. It lasts for a long time because the jump from triplet state to singlet ground state requires an electron to change spin, which is a quantum mechanically forbidden transition.

Many molecules can be excited by an incident photon to the lowest singlet excited state. If these molecules then emit light from this state, it is known as fluorescence. Sometimes, a process known as internal conversion may occur and the electron may drop down to an intermediate triplet state. Now, the electron is trapped because it needs to undergo a forbidden transition to reach the ground state. This is why phosphorescent material will glow for minutes after being exposed to bright light.

___________________ singlet excited state ____________
                                 \
 ^                                \ internal conversion
 |               |                 \
 |               |                  \
 |               |                 ___________ triplet state
 | excitation    | fluorescence            |
 |               |                         | phosphorescence
 |               |                         |
 |               v                         v
__________________________ ground state  _____________


An interesting experiment to try at home: Take an object that glows in the dark with the green phosphorescence. Charge it up with room light until it glows very brightly when you turn off the lights. Now, if you take a laser pointer (the red diode laser ones) and shine it on the object, you'll see a dark spot where the laser hit it. Instead of charging the phosphorescence up, its taking it away! This is because the red laser light is actually making the electron jump from the low energy triplet state back to its singlet excited state, where it then quickly decays back to the ground state. Red light has less energy than blue and green light so it is not strong enough to excite from the ground state to the excited state.

Poets love lights in the dark
The full moon on winter snow
Flashlights in blackened caverns
Fireflies on summer nights
Cats' eyes shining just after midnight

Years ago
First job out of college
In a crumbling three-room apartment
Long days, little money, little hope
On the ceiling, just over the bed
A lonely plastic glow-in-the-dark star
A leftover artifact from
A former 8-year-old resident

I fell asleep every night
Staring at the single star on my dark ceiling
The single green-glowing star
In an expanse of popcorn-plastered shadow
A green blob glimpsed through fluttering eyelids
Before being swallowed by slumber

I moved out months later
But left the star glued to the ceiling
In case someone else needed
A glimmer of light
In an endless night

Poets love lights in the dark

Phos`phor*es"cence (?), n. [Cf. F. phosphorescence.]

1.

The quality or state of being phosphorescent; or the act of phosphorescing.

2.

A phosphoric light.

 

© Webster 1913.

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