From Puzzling Spectral Lines to Quantum Electric-Field Sensors: A 100-Year Journey of the Stark Effect by Daniel O’Sullivan
Background Picture a simple gas-discharge lamp. Turn on a strong electric field nearby and, to Johann Stark’s amazement in 1913, each bright stripe in hydrogen’s spectrum fractured into a neat family of subsidiary lines. That splitting—now called the Stark Effect was an early, spectacular clue that electrons sit on discretely defined energy levels […]