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3
More or less. If you mean "orbital" in the sense "those things that can hold two electrons", then yes. A bound electron in an atom can be described by four quantum numbers, one of which is the spin and has two possible values, so any given "orbital" can be described by 3.The three are: n - Principal (shell), n > 0 l - azimuthal (subshell: s, p, d, f, g, h, etc.) n > l >= 0 m - magnetic (specific orbital within a subshell), -l <= m <= l
They can only have 1 S ORBITAL per energy level (1s, 2s, 3s...). Each S orbital consists of 2 electrons of opposite spin.
The magnetic quantum number ml depends on the orbital angular momentum (azimuthal) quantum number, l, which in turn depends on the principal quantum number, n. The orbital angular momentum (azimuthal) quantum number, l, runs from 0 to (n-1) where n is the principal quantum number. l= 0 is an s orbital, l= 1 is a p subshell, l= 2 is a d subshell, l=3 is an f subshell. The magnetic quantum number, ml, runs from -l to +l (sorry this font is rubbish the letter l looks like a 1) so for an f orbital the values are -3. -2, -1, 0, +1, +2, +3, so 7 f orbitals in total. ml "defines " the shape of the orbital and the number within the subshell.
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
It refers to the orientation of the orbital on the xyz coordinate system. It is dependent on the value of "L". Possible values range from -L through +L.
For the d orbital, the value of l is 2 and the value of ml is - l to + l, so the values of ml would be -2, -1, 0, +1, +2. So, the maximum value would be +2.
3
An atomic orbital is a mathematical term signifying the characteristics of the 'orbit' or cloud created by movement of an electron or pair of electrons within an atom. Angular momentum, signified as l, defines the angular momentum of the orbital's path as opposed to values n and m which correspond with the orbital's energy and angular direction, respectively.
The M orbital, there's only 1 electron in it.
nl;m
Orbital Orientation or the specific orbital within a sub level.
The specific orbital within a
Vc = sqrt of (G * M / R)
More or less. If you mean "orbital" in the sense "those things that can hold two electrons", then yes. A bound electron in an atom can be described by four quantum numbers, one of which is the spin and has two possible values, so any given "orbital" can be described by 3.The three are: n - Principal (shell), n > 0 l - azimuthal (subshell: s, p, d, f, g, h, etc.) n > l >= 0 m - magnetic (specific orbital within a subshell), -l <= m <= l
S orbital
what is the relationhip between the values m and n plotted on the number line