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(N-1)=(4-1)= N=3 l=0,1,2,3
l is greater than n
All numbers between -2.5 and 3, not including -2.5.
Since there are no lists following, the answer must be "none of them!"
The question is ambiguous and the possible answers are n + 5*6 = n + 30 or (n + 5)*6
4,3,2,1,0
(N-1)=(4-1)= N=3 l=0,1,2,3
15
l is greater than n
I have essentially zero ability to answer that without seeing the equation. Another answer: n-1 = 3-1= 2 l=2 ml= -2,-1,0,1,2.
If l > m and m > n then l > n by the transitive property of inequality.
If n=0 that means there are no values for l
Possible values of quantum numbers in order of n,l,m,s in the second shell:2,0,0,-1/22,0,0,+1/22,1,-1,-1/22,1,-1,+1/22,1,0,-1/22,1,0,+1/22,1,1,-1/22,1,1,+1/2
n : 2 l : 1 ml : -1, 0, or 1
It depends on how I is defined.
It depends whether you mean ml or ms.There are 4 quantum numbers, n, l, ml, msThey have long names respectively principal, azimuthal (angular momentum), magnetic and spin.n can have values 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5......l depends on n, and can have values, 0 to (n-1) (0 is an s orbital, 1 is a p subshell, 2 is a d subshell, 3 is a f subshell etcml can have -l to +l (sorry this font is rubbish the letter l looks like a 1) so for a d orbital, where l = 2, it can be -2, -1 0, +1, +2. Five d orbitals in all.ms can be -1/2 or +1/2 (These are the maximum of 2 electrons having opposite spin)l depends on n, and can have values, 0 to (n-1) (0 is an s orbital, 1 is a p subshell, 2 is a d subshell, 3 is a f subshell etcRead more: What_are_the_possible_values_for_the_quantum_numbers
45, 90, 180