Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us.

  2. www.encyclopedia.com › historians-miscellaneous-biographies › philipp-lenardPhilipp Lenard | Encyclopedia.com

    May 23, 2018 · Philipp Lenard. German physicist Philipp Lenard (1862–1947) won the 1905 Nobel Prize for his research into the properties of cathode rays. His reputation was later tarnished, however, thanks to his support of Germany's National Socialist (Nazi) Party and its racial–superiority theories.

  3. Philipp Eduard Anton von Lenard was a Hungarian-born German physicist and the winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1905 for his work on cathode rays and the discovery of many of their properties. One of his most important contributions was the experimental realization of the photoelectric effect.

  4. Living from June 7th, 1862 to May 20th, 1879, Philipp Eduard Anton von Lenard was a German scientist who studied the physics behind cathode rays. [1] Philipp Eduard Anton von Lenardl. Contents. 1 Personal Life. 1.1 Life and Education. 2 Work. 2.1 Photoelectric Findings. 2.2 Meteorological Findings. 2.3 Awards. 3 "Deutsche Physik" 4 References.

  5. For Philipp Lenard, the recipient of the 1905 Nobel Prize for physics and an adviser to Adolf Hitler, the conflict between experimental and theoretical physics was personified in his hatred for Einstein.

  6. Lenard received the 1905 Nobel Prize in Physics for his research in this field. He is noted also for his work on the structure of the atom and for the discovery in 1902, in connection with the photoelectric effect, that the velocity of electrons is independent of the intensity of the light that emits them.

  7. Philipp Lenard discovered in 1902 that the maximum velocity with which electrons leave a metal plate after it is illuminated with ultra. violet light is independent of the intensity of the light. He concluded that "in the process of emission the light plays only the role of trigger.

  1. People also search for