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Albert Einstein explained how light is radiated in packets of energy called quanta in his paper on the photoelectric effect in 1905. This idea revolutionized the field of physics and laid the groundwork for the development of quantum mechanics.
Planck.
Yes, it's basically the same thing. Light energy (for example) comes in quanta, or "packets", that can't be further subdivided. The quanta are identified with particles, known as "photons".
Light quanta are discrete packets of energy known as photons that make up electromagnetic radiation, including visible light. These particles exhibit both wave-like and particle-like properties, and are the basic unit of light energy.
The photoelectric effect proved that light can behave as discrete particles or "quanta" of energy called photons, as opposed to just being wave-like in nature. It also demonstrated the relationship between the frequency of light and the energy of the emitted electrons. This discovery contributed to the development of quantum theory.
Light consists of discrete packets of energy called quanta. A single quantum of light is better known as a photon.
Quanta of light are called photons.
The quanta of light are called photons.
Light quanta, also known as photons, are tiny packets of energy that make up light. They contribute to our understanding of the nature of light by demonstrating that light can behave both as a wave and as particles. This duality helps explain phenomena like the photoelectric effect and the behavior of light in certain experiments.
wave.
Quanta of energy, according to Planck's quantum theory, are small packets of energy which is transferred from one body to another, They are how the energy is present in nature according to Max planck.
In 1900 Max Planck noted that the spectrum of black-body radiation could be easily explained if it was assumed that light came in quanta (his word) of energy, each equal to the frequency of light times a constant (since known as "Planck's Constant"). He did not propose that these quanta actually existed, only the mathematical fact that they could explain something that, until then, could not be explained. Albert Einstein noted that this same assumption also readily explained the photo-electric effect; and proposed that these quanta were real physical quantities. In 1926, Gilbert Lewis gave these quanta the name "photons." In 1927 Arthur Eddington whimsically described them as "wavicles."