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Photoelectric effect is the emission of electrons when light hits a material. It demonstrates light's particle nature and is used in photodiodes and image sensors.
Fórmula
The calculator applies KE_max = hf - φ
Guia passo a passo
- 1Enter photon frequency and material's work function
- 2The calculator applies KE_max = hf - φ
- 3Results show maximum electron kinetic energy
Exemplos resolvidos
Entrada
f = 6 × 10¹⁴ Hz, φ = 2 eV
Resultado
KE_max = 2.48 - 2 = 0.48 eV
Using h = 4.136 × 10⁻¹⁵ eV·s
Erros comuns a evitar
- ✕Confusing frequency with wavelength in calculations
- ✕Thinking intensity affects electron kinetic energy
Perguntas frequentes
Why doesn't classical physics explain photoelectric effect?
Classical theory predicts increasing light intensity increases electron kinetic energy, but it doesn't—frequency alone matters.
What's threshold frequency?
Minimum frequency for electron emission: f_threshold = φ/h; below this, no emission regardless of intensity.
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