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Radius of 'n'th orbit of hydrogen like species of atomic no.'z'
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Remember always that the classical picture of the hydrogen atom is wrong, completely wrong, totally wrong in nearly every possible way. Other than that, yeah, half an Angstrom is about right for the Bohr radius of hydrogen.
Hydrogen atom = 1 proton 1 electron Hydrogen's 1 electron occupies the lowest energy level, 1s orbital. The atom is therefore in its "ground state". When a photon of correct frequency "collides" with a electron in hydrogen's 1s orbital the energy contained in the photon is transferred to the electron. The electron then gets added energy, so it is at a higher energy state. When it reaches this higher energy state the electron jumps to the next energy level and there it starts its new orbit. Hydrogen atom is now "excited" For any other atoms it is the same thing because all atoms can undergo excitation. The only difference between hydrogen's 1 electron and other atom's many electrons is WHICH ELECTRON will be "excited"
The hydrogen atom has 1 electron.
Oh, yes it is. because hydrogen has only one electron in its orbit and a smallest elemental atom too.
Radius of 'n'th orbit of hydrogen like species of atomic no.'z'
Radius
The electron emits a photon of light which we can see in a spectrograph as color. Four colors are normally seen in a hydrogen atom subjected to energy.
one photonAn electron moves from a higher orbit to a lower orbit
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it is produced when an electron from a higher energy orbit drops down to a lower level of energy orbit.
Remember always that the classical picture of the hydrogen atom is wrong, completely wrong, totally wrong in nearly every possible way. Other than that, yeah, half an Angstrom is about right for the Bohr radius of hydrogen.
An orbit is the path around the nucleus of an atom. an electron generally moves along this orbit.
It's produced when an electron from a higher energy orbit drops down to a lower level energy orbit
yes
electron