Schrodinger and Heisenberg state that electrons cannot be predicted in 1927. It was stated that the more precisely the position of some particles are determined, the less precisely its momentum can be known.
"Uncertainty Principle". He didn't say that the position can't be precisely determined. He said that the position and the momentum can't both be precisely determined at the same time. The more precisely you determine one, the more fuzzy the other becomes at the same time.
The scientist said "Are you positive"
When the electrons are at higher energy level,they are said to be excited state.
According to rutherford an electron jumps from one orbit to other by continueous discharge of energy ( classical thought about energy) while bohr said that electron jumps at once by discharging quanta of energy( quantum view of energy)
No, when an electron jumps to a higher energy level, the atom is said to be in an excited state. The ground state of an atom is when its electrons occupy the lowest possible energy levels.
The idea of the path of an electron being unpredictable was presented by Werner Heisenberg. It was "packaged" as "Heisenberg's uncertainty principle" and that's how we know it today. What Heisenberg actually said was that if we look at an electron, the closer we look at its momentum, the less certain we are about its position. And if we look closely at its position, the less certain we can be about its momentum. There is a trade-off when we look for precision, and we cannot have our cake and eat it too. It's one or the other as regards accuracy.
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Bohr^ wrong. Werner Heisenberg/ Erwin Shrodinger did.So who did, Bohr or Schrodinger and Heisenberg?
'Said in advance' is what the word 'predicted' means.
professor NEILS BOHR postulated from his discrete electron orbit theory that electrons get caught in imaginary orbits around the atomic nucleus.
This electron is called excited.
That would be the electron cloud. This is like the orbital model where there are electrons in each orbit level but the electron's location can not be predicted so it is said to be most likely at a point in the electron cloud.
The scientist who said this is Werner Heisenberg. He formulated the uncertainty principle, which states that it is impossible to know both the exact position and momentum of a particle, such as an electron, simultaneously.
Dalton
'Said in advance' is what the word 'predicted' means.
Electrons are said to occupy orbitals, around the atomic nucleus. They do not actually orbit in the manner that planets orbit the sun; they spread themselves out, as an electron cloud, and surround the nucleus rather than moving in an orbit.
Cow paths