{"ai_pass_count":5,"analysis_step_count":17,"confidence":0.7405209883581847,"created_at":"2026-07-02T15:42:19.437524+00:00","id":136931,"node_number":"66296","processing_time":2.42856764793396,"recent_steps":["net.store_session","net.llm_structured_analysis","net.rules_detect","net.context_window","net.store_session"],"recording_id":138036,"text":"Steve, do you want to come back and give us the answer? Yeah, this is Steve W.A.6-D.F.K. Albert Nye-san did not win the Nobel Prize for anything like E equals MC squared and all that good stuff that we think of him for. He actually won the Nobel Prize. I believe it was in 1905 or he did his research anyway in 1905 on the photoelectric effect, which is basically how solar panels work. And it could not be explained by classical theory because of several things that we couldn't be explained, including why there was a certain cut off. The lower energy light waves would not make solar panels work no matter how intense they were. And the very interesting and the only way it could be explained of course was with photons, which is the particle theory of light. And that's my answer. Everybody have a great K.W.A.6-D.F.K. Back."}