Stoletov's law
Stoletov's law (or the first law of photoeffect) for photoelectric effect establishes the direct proportionality between the intensity of electromagnetic radiation acting on a metallic surface and the photocurrent induced by this radiation. The law was discovered by Aleksandr Stoletov in 1888.[1][2][3]
Notes
- Stoletow, A. (1888). "Sur une sorte de courants electriques provoques par les rayons ultraviolets". Comptes Rendus. CVI: 1149. (Reprinted in Stoletow, M.A. (1888). "On a kind of electric current produced by ultra-violet rays". Philosophical Magazine. Series 5. 26 (160): 317–319. doi:10.1080/14786448808628270.; abstract in Beibl. Ann. d. Phys. 12, 605, 1888).
- Stoletow, A. (1888). "Sur les courants actino-electriqies au travers deTair". Comptes Rendus. CVI: 1593. (Abstract in Beibl. Ann. d. Phys. 12, 723, 1888).
- Stoletow, A. (1888). "Suite des recherches actino-electriques". Comptes Rendus. CVII: 91. (Abstract in Beibl. Ann. d. Phys. 12, 723, 1888).
gollark: Plus you have to manually muck with stupid layers of `cmake`, `autoconf`, `automake` and whatever else.
gollark: C, however, does not do this at all sanely for development environments.
gollark: Which Rust, etc allow.
gollark: Yes, indeed.
gollark: ???
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