Planck's constant describes the ratio between the energy of an electromagnetic wave and the frequency of that wave.
No, Planck's Constant is a repeating decimal. 2/3E-33.
Planck's Constant is dimensionally equal to Angular Momentum. The unit is Joules second.
Hi, The original answer was: Planck's Constant = Energy/Frequency = [ML2T-2]/[T-1] = [ML2T-2] So, Dimensional Formula of Planck's Constant = [ML2T-2] In fact, it should read: Planck's Constant = Energy/Frequency = [ML2T-2]/[T-1] = [ML2T-1] So, Dimensional Formula of Planck's Constant = [ML2T-1] Regards, Lho
If Planck's constant could be affected, changed, influenced, impacted, modified, or revised by anything, then it's doubtful that the scientific community would refer to it as a 'constant', regardless of how great Planck was.
E = hv Where h is the Planck's constant v is the frequency of the photon and E is the energy of the photon
The meaning of h in the Planck's constant is the photon having a frequency of one unit in any scale.
Planck's constant relates the energy level of radiation due to electrons moving from one energy level to another, by the formula Energy = (Planck's constant) x (frequency of radiation). Therefore the dimensions of Planck's constant are (energy)/(frequency) which means Joules x seconds In fact Planck's constant = 6.67 x 10-34 joule.seconds.
The frequency in Planck's equation refers to the frequency of electromagnetic radiation, such as light. The equation relates the energy of a photon to its frequency through the constant known as Planck's constant.
Yes, Max Planck has an institute and a unit of measurement named after him. The Max Planck Institute is a network of research institutions in Germany, while the Planck constant is a physical constant used in quantum mechanics, named in his honor.
No, it does not.
Albert Enstein was the first person to use Planck's theory