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• current and current density • conductivity and resistivity • chapter 29
• current and current density • conductivity and resistivity • chapter 29

Electricity and Magnetism Unit
Electricity and Magnetism Unit

Prezentacja programu PowerPoint
Prezentacja programu PowerPoint

... Particle vs wave models of the light 1805 – Young’s experiment – wave! 1865 – James Clerk Maxwell's prediction that light was an electromagnetic wave 1888 – Heinrich Hertz's experimental confirmation by detection of radio waves 1905 – Albert Einstein, “light quantum” (das Lichtquant) and photoelectr ...
W - Вернуться к содержанию сайта
W - Вернуться к содержанию сайта

... optical radiation into other frequency ranges with the possibility of smooth or stepwise radiation frequency tuning. Already with the advent of nonlinear optics it has become obvious that instead of having a number of generators, one for each frequency range, it is easier to have a not very large la ...
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File

Honors Biology Chapter 6 Photosynthesis
Honors Biology Chapter 6 Photosynthesis

Electromagnetic Waves
Electromagnetic Waves

... 1948 the Doppler effect for electromagnetic waves and in 1849 he published the first results obtained by his method for determining the speed of light (Fizeau-Foucault apparatus), Fizeau’s experiment of 1849 measured the value to be about 3×108 m/s. (Fizeau' s value for light' s speed was about 5% t ...
Chapter 5
Chapter 5

... – Black Body Emission: An object with a finite temperature will emit light with a spectrum described by a black body spectrum. – Spectral Emission: The atoms of the object can absorb only light at certain frequency, and then re-emit light in these frequencies in all direction. • Absorption: Matter c ...
The Nature of Light (PowerPoint)
The Nature of Light (PowerPoint)

Energy Forms
Energy Forms

... vibration or a back and forth movement of an object. Sound is a wave of vibrations that spread from its source of its matter. The more vibrations the waves have, the more energy, the louder the sound. The faster the vibrations or the frequency, the higher the sound. How high or low a sound is called ...
QuestionSheet
QuestionSheet

... electron (b) the centre of mass frame. Check the consistency of these estimates by considering the Lorentz contraction in going between the electron rest frame and the centre of mass frame. ...
CHAPTER 32 ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES
CHAPTER 32 ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES

Energy - Office Mix
Energy - Office Mix

ILDPerformance
ILDPerformance

PHY 142 Past Question3
PHY 142 Past Question3

Light, colors, spectral lines
Light, colors, spectral lines

... mercury, iron, …) has its own particular set of energy levels and its own set of spectral ...
Chemical Bonds and Compounds
Chemical Bonds and Compounds

... - Chlorine (Cl) gains 1 electron and becomes negatively charged with a charge of 1- (anion) Na ...
Atoms and Elements
Atoms and Elements

Appendix I.
Appendix I.

... inelastically scattered light from molecules. Like FTIR, this technique is used to determine molecular structures, but it utilizes a different wavelength of radiation (a laser source), and it is concerned with the scattering of radiation by the sample, rather than the absorption process. Light there ...
Syllabus, Introduction, and Review on Physical Laws ()
Syllabus, Introduction, and Review on Physical Laws ()

... • Light has a dual personality; it behaves as a stream of particle like photons, but each photon has wavelike properties ...
Spectra and Atomic Structure
Spectra and Atomic Structure

... Energy levels of the hydrogen atom, showing two series of emission lines: ...
The Periodic Table
The Periodic Table

... completely shield the increasing nuclear charge caused by the added protons. The electrons in the same principal quantum level are generally more strongly bound when moving left to right across the periodic table (NOTE: This trend is the opposite of the atomic radius trend) ...
HTPIB27O The Einstein-Bohr Debate
HTPIB27O The Einstein-Bohr Debate

... For example… ...
The Photosynthesis Process
The Photosynthesis Process

... dioxide  and  oxygen  that  are  needed  for  photosynthesis.  The  vascular  bundles  are   essentially  veins  for  the  plant  and  transport  water  and  nutrients.  The  mesophyll   cells  are  where  the  chloroplasts  are  located ...
Basiclight_poster
Basiclight_poster

< 1 ... 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 ... 208 >

Photoelectric effect

The photoelectric effect is the observation that many metals emit electrons when light shines upon them. Electrons emitted in this manner can be called photoelectrons. The phenomenon is commonly studied in electronic physics, as well as in fields of chemistry, such as quantum chemistry or electrochemistry.According to classical electromagnetic theory, this effect can be attributed to the transfer of energy from the light to an electron in the metal. From this perspective, an alteration in either the amplitude or wavelength of light would induce changes in the rate of emission of electrons from the metal. Furthermore, according to this theory, a sufficiently dim light would be expected to show a lag time between the initial shining of its light and the subsequent emission of an electron. However, the experimental results did not correlate with either of the two predictions made by this theory.Instead, as it turns out, electrons are only dislodged by the photoelectric effect if light reaches or exceeds a threshold frequency, below which no electrons can be emitted from the metal regardless of the amplitude and temporal length of exposure of light. To make sense of the fact that light can eject electrons even if its intensity is low, Albert Einstein proposed that a beam of light is not a wave propagating through space, but rather a collection of discrete wave packets (photons), each with energy hf. This shed light on Max Planck's previous discovery of the Planck relation (E = hf) linking energy (E) and frequency (f) as arising from quantization of energy. The factor h is known as the Planck constant.In 1887, Heinrich Hertz discovered that electrodes illuminated with ultraviolet light create electric sparks more easily. In 1905 Albert Einstein published a paper that explained experimental data from the photoelectric effect as being the result of light energy being carried in discrete quantized packets. This discovery led to the quantum revolution. In 1914, Robert Millikan's experiment confirmed Einstein's law on photoelectric effect. Einstein was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1921 for ""his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect"", and Millikan was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1923 for ""his work on the elementary charge of electricity and on the photoelectric effect"".The photoelectric effect requires photons with energies from a few electronvolts to over 1 MeV in elements with a high atomic number. Study of the photoelectric effect led to important steps in understanding the quantum nature of light and electrons and influenced the formation of the concept of wave–particle duality. Other phenomena where light affects the movement of electric charges include the photoconductive effect (also known as photoconductivity or photoresistivity), the photovoltaic effect, and the photoelectrochemical effect.
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