News Release

Photoemission 100 years after Einstein

Special focus issue of New Journal of Physics

Peer-Reviewed Publication

IOP Publishing

In 1921 Einstein won the Nobel Prize not for his work on relativity, but for solving a puzzle that had baffled scientists since 1887 – the photoelectric effect. In one of the three ground-breaking papers he published in 1905 he explained it in one astonishing blow: the light is quantized. His work was the first step in launching quantum theory.

Today (Friday 29th April 2005) New Journal of Physics (NJP) published a special celebratory focus issue containing a series of new papers looking at the latest applications of the phenomenon first explained by Einstein one hundred years ago. NJP is co-owned by the Institute of Physics and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (the German Physical Society).

First noticed by Hertz in 1887, the photoelectric effect is the emission of electrons from a surface (usually metallic) on exposure to electromagnetic radiation (such as visible light and ultraviolet radiation).

On 17 March 1905 - three days after his 26th birthday - Einstein submitted a paper titled "A heuristic point of view concerning the production and transformation of light" to Annalen der Physik. In it he suggested that light can be thought of as individual packets or "quanta" of energy. This hypothesis, which had been tentatively proposed by Max Planck a few years earlier, directly challenged the wave theory of light. However, Einstein was able to use the idea to explain certain puzzles about the way that light, or other electromagnetic radiation, ejected electrons from a metal via the photoelectric effect.

"The arguments Einstein used in the photoelectric and subsequent radiation theory are staggering in their boldness and beauty," says Frank Wilczek, a theorist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who shared the 2004 Nobel Prize for Physics. "He put forward revolutionary ideas that both inspired decisive experimental work and helped launch quantum theory." Although not fully appreciated at the time, Einstein's work on the quantum nature of light was the first step towards establishing the wave-particle duality of quantum particles.

Photoemission is now one of the major tools for detailed investigations of the electronic structure of matter and contributes heavily to our understanding of the properties of matter. It provides the complete set of quantum numbers for electrons in a solid and has been called the "smoking gun" for solving difficult puzzles in condensed matter physics.

This celebratory focus issue of NJP shows examples of the rich variety of applications of the phenomenon first explained by Einstein one hundred years ago.

Franz Himpsel, guest editor of the issue, said: "The papers in this special issue demonstrate some of the new directions in photoemission. For example, how scientists are now designing fast electronic devices using "hot electrons", and complex materials such as high-temperature superconductors which has opened a new field of tailored electronic materials where the electrons are highly correlated".

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Notes to editors:

For further information contact: David Reid, press officer, Institute of Physics, Tel: 0044 20 7470 4815, Mobile: 07946 321473, E-mail: david.reid@iop.org.

19 papers will be published on 29th April 2005 in New Journal of Physics (www.njp.org) as part of a celebratory focus issue on 'Photoemission and Electronic Structure' edited by Franz Himpsel and Per-Olof Nilsson. Further contributions to the issue will appear in the near future.

You can view all contributions to the focus issue free of charge here: http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/1367-2630/7/1/E02

New Journal of Physics (NJP) is an open-access research journal covering the whole of physics. Completely free to read, NJP is funded by article charges from authors of published papers. The journal and its publishing model are supported by a growing number of physical societies around the world. It is co-owned by the Institute of Physics and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (the German Physical Society).

The Institute of Physics is a leading international professional body and learned society with over 37,000 members, which promotes the advancement and dissemination of a knowledge of and education in the science of physics, pure and applied. It has a world-wide membership and is a major international player in:

  • scientific publishing and electronic dissemination of physics;
  • setting professional standards for physicists and awarding professional qualifications;
  • promoting physics through scientific conferences, education and science policy advice

The Institute is a member of the Science Council, and a nominated body of the Engineering Council. The Institute works in collaboration with national physical societies and plays an important role in transnational societies such as the European Physical Society and represents British and Irish physicists in international organisations. In Great Britain and Ireland the Institute is active in providing support for physicists in all professions and careers, encouraging physics research and its applications, providing support for physics in schools, colleges and universities, influencing government and informing public debate.


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