Johannes Stark was a German physicist born on April 15, 1874. He is best known for his work in atomic physics and for discovering the Stark effect, which describes the splitting of spectral lines in an electric field. Stark's research contributed significantly to the understanding of atomic structure. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1919 for his discoveries. Johannes passed away on June 21, 1957, leaving a lasting impact on the field of physics.

"We have learnt through experience that when an electrical ray strikes the surface of an atom, an electron, and in some circumstances a second and even a third electron, can be detached."



"The most common and most important result of them is that the nature and size of the effect on corresponding series of different elements are largely an expression of the peculiarity of their atomic structure - or, at least, of the structure of the surface."



"The removal of an electron from the surface of an atom - that is, the ionization of the atom - means a fundamental structural change in its surface layer."



"In my view the structure of the whole atom was that of an individual, with all its parts interconnected, and the emission of a spectral line appeared to me to be the result of the coherence and co-operation of several electric quanta."



"Moreover, the abundance of chemical compounds and their importance in daily life hindered the chemist from investigating the question, in what does the individuality of the atoms of different elements consist."



"The emitters of the spectral series are without exception single atoms, not compounds of atoms."



"With this in mind, for some twenty years I have set myself as my particular task the experimental investigation of the connexion between change in the structure and change in the spectra of chemical atoms."



"At the head of these new discoveries and insights comes the establishment of the facts that electricity is composed of discrete particles of equal size, or quanta, and that light is an electromagnetic wave motion."



"The movement of the emitters of the spectral lines may be deduced on the basis of the Doppler principle."



"Many scientists will have to contribute to the solution of the great problem; they will have to follow up and measure all those phenomena in which the atomic structure is directly expressed."



"By recognizing that the chemical atom is composed of single separable electric quanta, humanity has taken a great step forward in the investigation of the natural world."

