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professor Dave here, let's talk about the Bohr model of the atom
once Einstein extendedplanks idea of energy quantization to electromagnetic radiation other
physicists made some similar strides. Niels Bohr was dealing with some
problems that were arising with the structure of the atom. if an atom has
positively charged protons and negatively charged electrons, why are atoms
stable? why don't the electrons just collide with the nucleus? and what were
these emission spectra that we can see? what is it about different elements that
makes them emit light of different colors? bohr answered these questions with
his model of the hydrogen atom. he extended the idea of energy quantization
and said that the potential energy of the electron in a hydrogen atom is also
quantized. this means that an electron can't have any imaginable energy but can
only inhabit certain energy levels that are at fixed distances from the nucleus
each type of atom has its energy levels at different values due to its unique
number of protons in the nucleus and an electron will transition from one energy
level to another when a photon of a very specific energy is either absorbed or
emitted by the electron. the energy of the photon will correspond to the difference
between the two energy levels so if the electron in a hydrogen atom goes from
the n=3 to the n=2 energy level, a photon will be emitted that is
equivalent to that specific energy gap. another transition has a different
energy gap associated with it and therefore generate a photon of that
particular energy. and to go from lower to higher energy levels an electron
must absorb a photon of that particular energy. for a hydrogen atom the energy
levels depend on the Rydberg constant and are given by the following equation
but we typically just measure the change in energy of an electron during a
transition so we can modify this equation to include the change in the
energy level. n final is where the electron ends and n initial is where it
begins. using this equation we can predict the wavelength of photon
associated with any
possible transition for the hydrogen atom. take this transition for example
from 4 to 2. plug in where the electron starts and where it ends and we get the
change in energy of the electron which equals the energy of the photon
from energy we can get frequency
and from frequency we can get wavelength
we group the transitions according to the energy level they land on. all the
ones that end on n=1 are called the lyman series. the ones that end at
n=2 are the balmer series, and so forth
notice that the energy level gaps decrease as n increases and n equals
infinity is actually a finite distance from the nucleus. if an electron goes
beyond that it is considered to have been ejected from the atom. the Balmer
series happens to contain transitions that generate photons of visible light
these are the ones found on the hydrogen emission spectrum. these lines correspond
to the electrons transitions that end at n=2 and the resulting photon
that transition emits which just happens to fall in the visible spectrum
as we said these energies are unique to hydrogen, every element will have its own
emission spectrum because every element has a unique nucleus and therefore
differently spaced energy levels. in this way an element's emission spectrum is
sort of like a fingerprint unique to that element. this is how we can know the
composition of objects in space, by analyzing the light we see. let's check comprehension
comprehension thanks for watching guys subscribe to my channel for more
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