Modern
Physics

Spring 2018
course
site

April 9

rest of term schedule

Mon               Thu
 9                11
16 (no class)     19  (chap 7 due)
23 (chap 8,9 due) 26 
30 (chap 10 due)

The assignments for these aren't posted yet but will be soon.

We'll be doing 8 & 9 in a somewhat shallow fashion - look for the big picture ideas i.e. the periodic table.

You should read chapter 8 (many electron atoms) and 9 (molecules) - we'll be discussing that material Thursday & next Thursday..

review

answers

OK, on to the rest of chapter 7.

electron spin

continuing our discussion from last class ... one more quantum number : \( m_s \) = +1/2 or -1/2 for electron spin.

related wikipedia articles

energy levels

The angular momentum is labeled by letters :

l   0  1  2  3  4  5  ...
    s  p  d  f  g  h  ...

which gives us this notation :

4s (2 states)   4p (6 states)   4d (10 states)  4f (14 states)
3s (2 states)   3p (6 states)   3d (10 states)
2s (2 states)   2p (6 states)
1s (2 states)

Spectral line transitions : as an electron "falls" from (say) 3p (l=1) to 1s (l=0), it has a change angular momentum of \(\Delta l = 1\) . If it were to try to go from 3s to 1s, it would need to have \(\Delta l = 0\)

But photons have angular momentum of 1 !

So the only transitions that happen have \(\Delta l = \pm 1 \)

splitting those degenerate levels

Zeeman effect

Fine structure

hyperfine structure

up next : more than one electron

All of that is for one electron.

When we put more electrons around the nucleas, the same orbitals and shells and quantum numbers are useful abstractions, but the physics changes - each electron feels the effects of both the nucleus and the other electrons.

The biggest change is that the energy levels the electrons closer to the nucleas effectively shield the electric field from the electrons further out.

This means that the energy depends on radius in a new way, and in particular, the energy depends on both n and l in a non-trivial way.

The big result of the next chapter is the periodic table, which is a consequence of the pattern of how the electrons form "shells" with related quantum numbers, and therefore which electrons are most loosely bound and available to interact with those in other atoms.

https://cs.marlboro.college /cours /spring2018 /modern_physics /notes /apr9
last modified Wed May 15 2024 2:41 pm