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authorEugeniy Mikhailov <evgmik@gmail.com>2014-09-17 13:58:37 -0400
committerEugeniy Mikhailov <evgmik@gmail.com>2014-09-17 13:58:37 -0400
commit1435a1488b9272a9fe3a5bf5a1c5346b93350217 (patch)
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parentdf36ab7dcfb14f192c31d0daa3472233f95003e9 (diff)
downloadmanual_for_Experimental_Atomic_Physics-1435a1488b9272a9fe3a5bf5a1c5346b93350217.tar.gz
manual_for_Experimental_Atomic_Physics-1435a1488b9272a9fe3a5bf5a1c5346b93350217.zip
typo fix, thanks to Zach
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Broglie suggested in his dissertation that since light has
both particle-like {\bf and} wave-like properties, perhaps all
matter might also have wave-like properties. He postulated
- that the wavelength of objects was given by $\lambda = h/p$, where where $h$ is Planck's constant, and $p =
+ that the wavelength of objects was given by $\lambda = h/p$, where $h$ is Planck's constant, and $p =
mv$ is the momentum. {\it This was quite a revolutionary idea},
since there was no evidence at the time that matter behaved
like waves. In 1927, however, Clinton Davisson and Lester