Skip to content

Photoelectric Effect

Simulation loading

Open Model Lab is preparing the live lab, controls, and graph surface for this concept.

Wrap-up

What you learned

Recommended next
Open concept testCheck whether the core ideas are ready without leaving this concept.
Read next
Atomic SpectraCarry photon energy into discrete line spectra.

Key takeaway

  1. Threshold frequency decides whether emission can begin at all.
  2. Intensity changes photon flux and current, not the energy carried by each photon.
  3. Above threshold, extra photon energy becomes maximum electron kinetic energy.
  4. Stopping potential measures that maximum kinetic energy by just preventing collection.

Common misconception

Do not treat brightness as stored-up energy that eventually ejects electrons below threshold. In this model, each emitted electron needs one photon above the work-function barrier.

In this bounded model, each emitted electron still needs one photon with enough energy to clear the work-function barrier.

Compare hf with the work function first; only above threshold do current and stopping voltage become meaningful measurements.

  1. Threshold and energy snapshot

    Increasing frequency increases the energy carried by each photon.

  2. Maximum emitted-electron energy

    After the electron escapes, any extra photon energy becomes maximum kinetic energy.

  3. Stopping potential

    The voltage that just stops the fastest electrons measures their maximum kinetic energy.

Why it behaves this way

Explanation

This page asks a simple question: what decides whether light can eject electrons from a metal? The key result is that frequency sets the energy of each photon. If that energy is below the metal's work function, no electrons are emitted, even if you make the beam brighter.

Once the light is above threshold, intensity mainly changes how many electrons are emitted, while frequency changes how energetic the fastest electrons are. The lamp, metal plate, collector plate, readouts, and graphs all stay tied to that same cause-and-effect story.

Key ideas

01Below the threshold frequency, increasing intensity still gives no emitted electrons because each photon is still individually below the work function.
02Above threshold, increasing frequency increases the maximum kinetic energy of emitted electrons, while increasing intensity mainly increases the current.
03The threshold frequency is set by the work function through f_0 = phi / h.
04A negative collector voltage can stop even emitted electrons, and the stopping potential measures the maximum kinetic energy.

Worked examples

Live photoelectric checks

Open examples when you want to see the same idea walked through step by step.

Frozen walkthrough

Step through the frozen example

Frozen walkthrough
Use the current light and metal settings from the live bench. The same controls determine the stage, graphs, overlays, and worked result.

Supporter unlocks saved study tools, exact-state sharing, and the richer review surfaces that support this guided flow.

View plans
Example 1 of 2
Frozen valuesUsing frozen parameters

For the current frequency 0.38 PHz and work function 2.3 eV, is the light above threshold, and how much energy is left for emitted electrons?

Light frequency

0.38 PHz PHz

Wavelength

788.93 nm nm

Work function

2.3 eV eV

1. Find the photon energy

With , the photon energy is .

2. Compare with the threshold

The metal needs , so the current threshold is .

3. Read the remaining electron energy

That leaves , so the live bench says no emission occurs.

Current emission state

Because is still below the work function 2.3 eV, the beam remains below threshold and no electrons are emitted.

Common misconception

Common misconception

Use this only when you want to pressure-test a mistaken intuition.

If sub-threshold light is bright enough, electrons can gradually build up enough energy to escape.

In this bounded model, each emitted electron still needs one photon with enough energy to clear the work-function barrier.

Brightness increases how many photons hit the metal, but if each photon is still below threshold, the collector current stays zero.

Quick test

Loading saved test state.

Bench tools and share links

Keep stable concept links and exact-state sharing tucked away until you actually need to relaunch or share the bench.

Try this setup

Jump to a named bench state or copy the one you are looking at now. Shared links reopen the same controls, graph, overlays, and compare context.

Current bench

Red below threshold preset

This bench is currently showing one of the concept's authored presets.

Open default bench

Saved setups

Saved setups are a Supporter study tool. Stable concept links still work for everyone.

Checking saved setup access

Open Model Lab is resolving whether this bench can save locally, sync to an account, or open Supporter-only compare tools.

Copy current setup

Exact-state sharing is part of Supporter. Stable concept and section links still stay available.

Stable links

Progress and next steps

Keep progress signals, starter-track handoffs, and review prompts available without letting them compete with the live lesson flow.

Progress

Loading progress

Loading saved concept progress for this browser or synced account before showing completion status.