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Home > JCE Software > Chemistry Comes Alive! > Sample Movies >
The Emission Spectrum of a Light Bulb as a Function of Temperature
The reaction shown in the movie below comes from the Chemistry Comes Alive! (CCA!) video collection. CCA! is published by the Journal of Chemical Education Software, Division of Chemical Education, Inc., American Chemical Society.

About This Movie

The spectrum of an incandescent light depends on the temperature of the filament.

As the current through the filament is increased, the temperature of the filament increases from room temperature to about 800 K, when the filament begins to glow dull red, and finally to a maximum of about 2800 K, when it is most bright and nearly "white hot." At 800 K, the light intensity is low and long wavelength red light predominates. As the filament temperature increases, the overall light intensity increases and light of shorter wavelengths (green through blue) is most intense.

In 1900 the German physicist Max Planck was able to explain this temperature dependence of the spectrum of an incandescent source by assuming that energy could be absorbed and emitted only in discrete amounts, called quanta. Five years later Albert Einstein extended Planck's theory by proposing that electromagnetic radiation, including visible light, consisted of discrete packets of energy, now called photons.


 
Finding This Sample Movie in the CCA! Collection
Following are links into the CCA! volume or volumes that contain this movie.
 
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CCA! volumes are organized according to topics in chemistry. Some movies are included on more than one volume of CCA! because they can be used to demonstrate more than one topic or idea.
 

Viewing Chemistry Comes Alive! Video
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You can download the latest version of QuickTime from the Apple Computer, Inc. WWW site.
 

Home > JCE Software > Chemistry Comes Alive! > Sample Movies > The Emission Spectrum of a Light Bulb as a Function of Temperature


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