George Domingo

Semiconductor Basics


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the left shows the absorption lines (below) and the emission lines (middle). On the right are the emission lines of several other materials."/>

      Source: https://www.shutterstock.com/image‐vector/spectrum‐spectral‐line‐example‐hydrogen‐emission‐1288942888?src=iUiOwiDEznOcV6XzswXhMA‐1‐0 (left); https://www.shutterstock.com/image‐vector/line‐spectra‐elements‐339037577?src=I6tWF1qlh6XcWayXsZl‐Gw‐3‐16 (right).

      Source Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Jakob_Balmer#/media/File:Balmer.jpeg (left); Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_Rydberg#/media/File:Rydberg,_Janne_(foto_Per_Bagge;_AFs_Arkiv).jpg (right).

      He called this particle a “light quantum.” (In 1926, a French physicist named Frithiof Wolfers [1891–1971] renamed the light quantum a photon. It is interesting that Einstein received the Nobel Prize in 1921 for the discovery of the photon, not for his much more famous work on relativity.) This light particle, the photon, has an energy that depends on the frequency of the light. The energy associated with this light is given by the formula

      where h is Planck's constant (h = 6.63 10−34 m2 kg s−1), c is the speed of light (c = 3 × 108 m s−1), and λ is the wavelength (m). The meter in the numerator cancels the one in the denominator, resulting in the energy given in Joules (= kg m2 s−2).

Photo of Albert Einstein in 1905.

      Source: Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Einstein#/media/File:Einstein_patentoffice.jpg.

      While all of these light experiments and relationships were being observed in the late nineteenth century, other scientists were playing with cathode‐ray tubes, the precursors of old television sets and oscilloscopes, trying to understand the nature of the atom. The cathode‐ray tube consists of an evacuated tube with two contacts, one at each end: the cathode and the anode. When a voltage is applied across the tube, current flows from the cathode to the anode, and the tube glows. The scientists explained this phenomenon by saying that electrons going through an evacuated tube containing very few atoms are able to attain sufficient velocity (and therefore kinetic energy) to hit the atoms and make them glow. They were called cathode rays.