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PhysicsModern PhysicsIntermediateStarter track

Concept module

Photoelectric Effect

Use one compact lamp-to-metal bench to see why light frequency sets electron emission, why intensity alone fails below threshold, and how stopping potential reads the electron energy honestly.

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Starter track

Step 1 of 50 / 5 complete

Modern Physics

Next after this: Atomic Spectra.

1. Photoelectric Effect2. Atomic Spectra3. de Broglie Matter Waves4. Bohr Model+1 more steps

This concept is the track start.

Why it behaves this way

Explanation

The photoelectric effect is the compact modern-physics case where light frequency matters more deeply than brightness. If each photon's energy stays below the metal's work function, no electrons leave the surface at all, even when the beam is made brighter.

This module keeps one lamp, one metal plate, one collector plate, and one linked set of readouts. Frequency, intensity, work function, collector voltage, worked examples, quick tests, overlays, and challenge checks all refer to that same honest emission bench instead of splitting into separate stories.

Key ideas

01Below the threshold frequency, raising intensity alone still gives no emitted electrons.
02Above threshold, frequency changes the electron energy, while intensity mainly changes how many electrons are emitted per second.
03The threshold frequency comes from the work function through f_0 = phi / h.
04A negative collector voltage can stop even emitted electrons, and the stopping potential reads the maximum kinetic energy.

Frozen walkthrough

Step through the frozen example

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

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Frozen valuesUsing frozen parameters

For the current frequency 0.95 PHz and work function 2.3 eV, does emission happen and what kinetic-energy budget remains?

Light frequency

0.95 PHz PHz

Wavelength

315.57 nm nm

Work function

2.3 eV eV

1. Convert frequency to photon energy

With , the photon energy is .

2. Compare with the work function

The metal needs , so the current threshold is .

3. Read the leftover energy

That leaves , so the live bench says emission occurs.

Current emission state

Because exceeds the work function 2.3 eV, electrons leave the surface with a maximum kinetic energy of 1.63 eV.

Threshold checkpoint

Two beams hit the same metal. Beam A is bright red light below threshold. Beam B is dimmer violet light above threshold. Which beam ejects electrons, and why?

Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.

Answer from photon energy first, not from brightness alone.

Check your reasoning against the live bench.

Beam B ejects electrons because its frequency gives each photon enough energy to clear the work function. Beam A does not, even if it is brighter.
The comparison is about per-photon energy, not just total light power. Intensity changes the photon flux, but threshold frequency decides whether emission can begin.

Common misconception

If you make sub-threshold light bright enough, electrons eventually absorb enough wave energy to escape.

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

Brightness raises the flux of photons, but if each photon is still below threshold, the collector current remains zero.

Quick test

Reasoning

Question 1 of 4

Answer from the live light-on-metal logic, not from disconnected slogans.

Bright red light below threshold hits a metal surface. What should happen?

Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.

Accessibility

The simulation shows a light-frequency rail across infrared, visible light, and ultraviolet, plus a compact lamp-to-metal bench with an emitter plate, a collector plate, and animated electron packets when emission occurs.

Optional overlays mark the threshold frequency, the intensity/current distinction, the retarding or aiding collector field, and a compact energy-budget card. The readout card summarizes band, photon energy, work function, maximum kinetic energy, stopping potential, available current, collected current, and collector voltage.

Graph summary

The energy-balance graph compares photon energy, work function, and maximum kinetic energy on one frequency axis. The collector-sweep graph shows collected current against collector voltage with the available current as a reference, and the intensity-sweep graph keeps intensity linked to current scale rather than to electron energy.