Free Term Papers on What Is The Photoelectric Effect?

OPPapers.com Essay Index >> Science >> What Is The Photoelectric Effect?

We have many free term papers and essays on What Is The Photoelectric Effect?. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.

Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. Photoelectric Effect

    Photoelectric Effect. The Photoelectric Effect Definition: It is the emission of
    electrons from a metal surface under the illumination of a suitable radiation. ...

  2. The Photoelectric Effect

    The Photoelectric Effect. ... There was one experiment conducted by Hertz, the photoelectric
    effect, which could not be explained by considering light to be a wave. ...

  3. What Is The Photoelectric Effect?

    What Is The Photoelectric Effect? The photoelectric effect refers to the
    emission, or ejection, of electrons from the surface of ...

  4. Light Intensity And Characteristics Of Photocells

    ... Light Intensity Characteristics of Photocells The photoelectric effect is defined
    as the emission of electrons from a material by visible light. ...

  5. Albert Einstein

    ... the nature of particle movement known as Brownian motion, the quantum nature of
    electromagnetic radiation as demonstrated by the photoelectric effect, and the ...

View More Papers...

What Is The Photoelectric Effect?

Submitted by shakattack2565 on March 13, 2008

Category: Science
Words: 423 | Pages: 2
Views: 29
Popularity Rank: 101,223
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

The photoelectric effect refers to the emission, or ejection, of electrons from the surface of, generally, a metal in response to incident light.

Energy contained within the incident light is absorbed by electrons within the metal, giving the electrons sufficient energy to be 'knocked' out of, that is, emitted from, the surface of the metal.

Using the classical Maxwell wave theory of light, the more intense the incident light the greater the energy with which the electrons should be ejected from the metal. That is, the average energy carried by an ejected (photoelectric) electron should increase with the intensity of the incident light.

In fact, Lénard found that this was not so. Rather, he found the energies of the emitted electrons to be independent of the intensity of the incident radiation.

Einstein (1905) successfully resolved this paradox by proposing that the incident light consisted of individual quanta, called photons, that interacted with the electrons in the metal like discrete particles, rather than as continuous waves. For a given frequency, or 'color,' of the incident radiation, each photon carried the energy E = hf, where h is Planck's constant and f is the frequency. Increasing the intensity of the light corresponded, in Einstein's model, to increasing the number of incident photons per unit time (flux), while the energy of each photon remained the same (as long as the frequency of the radiation was held constant).

Clearly, in Einstein's model, increasing the intensity of the incident radiation would cause greater numbers of electrons to be ejected, but each electron would carry the same average energy because each incident photon carried the same energy. [This assumes that the dominant process consists of individual photons being absorbed by and resulting in the ejection of a single electron.] Likewise, in Einstein's model, increasing the frequency f, rather than the...

You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!