1 / 12

The Electrons can only orbit on specific orbits These orbits have specific energies

The Bohr Model of Atoms. The Electrons can only orbit on specific orbits These orbits have specific energies When an electron falls “down” energy is released in the form of a photon If a passing photon has just the right energy, an electron can get bumped “up”.

torie
Download Presentation

The Electrons can only orbit on specific orbits These orbits have specific energies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Bohr Model of Atoms • The Electrons can only orbit on specific orbits • These orbits have specific energies • When an electron falls “down” energy is released in the form of a photon • If a passing photon has just the right energy, an electron can get bumped “up” • Because the electrons can only be on certain special energy levels, only certain amounts of energy can be absorbed/emitted • The special energies that can be absorbed or emitted depends on which type of atom you have

  2. Emission Spectra of the Elements

  3. The Quantum Mechanics of Atoms • Electrons don’t exist at one place at all – they are in a nebulous probability cloud • The Bohr model is simpler, so we’ll pretend it’s right electron cloud

  4. Atomic Spectra • Suppose you take an atom and bump the electrons up (by heating it, for example). What type of light comes out? • Spectrum consists of emission lines • Exactly which lines tells you the kind of atom, like a fingerprint Q. 19: Analyzing Emission Spectra

  5. Atomic Spectra • Suppose you take an atom and shine a bright white light on it. What does the spectrum of the light look like when it comes out? • Initial spectrum is continuous • Atom absorbs certain very specific frequencies • The same frequencies you saw before

  6. Hot Stuff Heat • Heat is disorganized energy • Kinetic energy is organized motion – like all the air in the room moving the same way • If you make all the atoms in the room move different ways, you heat up the room • Whenever energy gets completely randomized, turned into heat, we say it is in thermal equilibrium • There is a statistical tendency for things to get disorganized

  7. Temperature – the Kelvin Scale • Heat is disorganized energy. Temperature is a measure of how much heat there is. • If you have no disorganized energy,you are at Absolute Zero • Absolute Zero: -273oC • Kelvin - just like Celsius,but the zero is shifted toabsolute zero. T0 = -273o C Temp. F C K Abs. Zero –459 –273 0 Freezing 32 0 273 Room 70 21 294 Boiling 212 100 373 Sun 9900 5500 5800 TK = TC + 273 • 300 K is comfortable

  8. Ideal Gasses • In a gas, all the atoms (or molecules) bounce around randomly. • The hotter it is, the faster they bounce around • As they bounce, they collide with the walls • Collisions cause pressure • The more atoms, and the hotter, thehigher the pressure P Pressure n Number density T Temperature (K) k constant P = knT Q. 19: Ideal Gas Law Temperature must be in Kelvin (K)!

  9. Black Body Radiation Flux is brightnessover area F =T4 2900 K • All Objects give off electromagnetic radiation “light” • Some objects are (nearly) perfect absorbers, and perfect emitters. Such objects are called black bodies • Color and brightness of light depends on temperature 4500 K 5500K 10,000K 20,000K

  10. Black Body Radiation lmaxT = 2900 Km • T in Kelvin Q. 20: Using Wien’s Law

  11. Kirchoff’s Laws • Hot thick solid, liquid, or gas – Continuous spectrum • Thin gas – bright line spectrum • Thin gas with hotter thick gas behind it – dark line spectrum

  12. Kirchoff’s Laws Continuous Spectrum: Hot, thick solid, liquid, or gas Bright Line Spectrum: Hot, thin gas Dark Line Spectrum: Cooler gas in front of hot, thick solid, liquid, or gas

More Related