The Photoelectric Effect and the Compton effect, both of these effects are explained by Photons.
Reflection, refraction, diffraction, dispersion, polarization, and interference
support the efficacy and utility of such a model.
Phenomena such as interference and diffraction are due to the wave model of light, electrons, etc., and are hard or impossible to explain with a particle-only model.
Interference, diffraction.
Two models were developed to explain what light is, the photon model, which depicts light as a particle, and the wave model. In the field of quantum mechanics it is now recognized that light is both a particle and a wave (sometimes called a wavicle).
a wave model of light.
a wave model of light.
its a light behaviour that represents light travelling as a wave
wave model of light
The wave model. More specifically, it shows that light is a transverse wave - a longitudonal wave can't be polarized.
The wave model of light and the particle model of light.
Two models were developed to explain what light is, the photon model, which depicts light as a particle, and the wave model. In the field of quantum mechanics it is now recognized that light is both a particle and a wave (sometimes called a wavicle).
a wave model of light.
a wave model of light.
its a light behaviour that represents light travelling as a wave
wave model of light
The wave model of light can not explain why heated objects emit only certain frequencies of light at a given temperature, why some metals emit electrons when light of a certain frequency is shone upon them, and it cannot explain the emission of different wavelengths from the different colors when an object (iron for example) is heated
Particle theory of light can explain Photoelectric Effect,Compton effect,Pair production.... wave theory of light can explain interference,refraction...
penis
A wave and a particle. Or maybe neither.
The particle model explains compton scattering and the photo-electric effect perfectly, which the wave model utterly fails to do. The full spectrum of blackbody radiation can be easily derived with the particle model of light, but not with the wave model.