Electron Microscopes Electron microscopes provide greater magnification than
traditional light microscopes by using focused beams of electrons instead of
visible light. It is the extremely short wavelengths of the electron beams
that make electron microscopes so powerful. The wavelength \(\lambda\) (in
meters) of any object in motion is given by \(\lambda=\frac{6.626 \times
10^{-34}}{m v}\), where \(m\) is the mass (in kilograms) of the object and \(v\) is
its velocity (in meters per second). Find the wavelength of an electron with a
mass of \(9.11 \times 10^{-31}\) kilogram and a velocity of \(5.9 \times 10^{6}\)
meters per second. (Submitted by Brian McIntyre, Senior Laboratory Engineer
for the Optics Electron Microscopy Facility at the University of Rochester.)