Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University South La Union Campus College of Graduate Studies Agoo, La Union
Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University South La Union Campus College of Graduate Studies Agoo, La Union
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In the 18th and 19th centuries it was believed that light was a wave. Many experiments
provided evidence for the wave model of light since they showed that light could refract,
reflect and interfere. However, there were other experiments that couldn’t be explained by
the wave model of light. In 1900 Max Planck proposed that when light was absorbed or
emitted it only came in discrete amounts. The particles of light in this model became known
as photons.
These photons have no mass, and no charge, but they do have energy. In fact they can have
a huge range of energies, and the light that we can see is only a very small part of the
spectrum. Photons are made up of a combination of an electric field and magnetic field
which travel around together, and so we call the entire range the electromagnetic spectrum
One of the interesting things about photons of a given wavelength is that they always travel
at the same speed in a given medium, e.g. air. Other particles, like electrons, travel faster
or slower depending on how much kinetic energy they have, but photons always travel at
Even though light behaves like particles, it still behaves like waves! When you do some
experiments, the light behaves like particles, while during other experiments it behaves like
waves. This is a great mystery. Other particles with mass like electrons and protons, and
even whole atoms, also behave like waves. This is called wave-particle duality, and is one
of the biggest mysteries of modern physics. For any wave, there is a relationship between
the speed, frequency and wavelength given by c = f. usually you need to know two of
these to find the third. However, with light, because the speed is always the same, knowing
the frequency will tell you the wavelength and vice versa.