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Play / 1:00 min. / 5.3 MB
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Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
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Around the year 1900 Philipp Lenard irradiated a metal plate with light. He interpreted the phenomena that had been observed until then: the light detached electrons from the plate, giving the plate a positive charge. Lenard found that the kinetic energy produced was determined not by the intensity of the light source, but by its frequency. Blue light produced the highest kinetic energy, while red light produced none.
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