ABSTRACT

Davisson and Germer performed an experiment, in which electrons were reflected from parallel layers of atoms in a crystal. The electrons showed interference, thus demonstrating the wave nature of the electron. Louis de Broglie postulated a wave model of the electron, in which an electron orbit was represented by a group of in-phase waves. The model predicted that the angular momentum of an electron could take on only a limited number of values, a concept that Neils Bohr had introduced some years earlier as an ad hoc assumption. In an electron microscope, electrons stream off a hot filament and are accelerated to high velocity by passing between two electrically charged plates. The electrons' wavelength is related to their velocity and it is easy to obtain electrons with wavelengths near 0.1 nm, which suggests the possibility of obtaining resolution of about the same magnitude.