According to Bohr's model of an atom, which of the following is/are quantized? (a) The total energy of electron is quantized. (b) Angular momentum of electron is quantized. (c) both (a) and (b). (d) None of the above.

1 Answer
Jun 7, 2017

(a)(a) and (b)(b).


Both energy and angular momentum are observables that correspond to so-called eigenvalues. Eigenvalues are the values that describe a result that occurs consistently, brought about by an observation.

All energies EE in a quantum mechanical system correspond to eigenvalues that are dependent on a particular quantum number.

An example of atomic energies is the hydrogen atom in the Rydberg equation:

DeltaE = -"13.6 eV"(1/n_f^2 - 1/n_i^2)

where:

  • n_i and n_f are the initial and final quantum numbers n for the energy levels across which an energy transition occurs.
  • DeltaE is the energy gap for that transition in units of "eV" (1.602 xx 10^(-19) "J" = "1 eV").

n = 1, 2, 3, . . . is the principal quantum number, indicating each energy level, corresponding to eigenvalues E_n.

Since n is quantized, it goes in integer steps, and thus the energy is quantized as well.

The angular momentum of the electron, corresponding to the "shape" of an orbital (not necessarily a thing for Bohr's model, which pretends there are orbits instead), has eigenvalues dependent on the quantum number, l:

l = 0, 1, 2, . . . , n-1 is the angular momentum quantum number, corresponding to the eigenvalue l(l+1)ℏ^2 of the squared angular momentum, L^2.

Clearly, l is going in integer steps, so angular momentum is quantized as well.


What about L_z, the z-angular momentum, which depends on m_l, the magnetic quantum number? Is the z-angular momentum quantized too?