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
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
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 andn_f are the initial and final quantum numbersn 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 eigenvaluesE_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 = 0, 1, 2, . . . , n-1 is the angular momentum quantum number, corresponding to the eigenvaluel(l+1)ℏ^2 of the squared angular momentum,L^2 .
Clearly,
What about