Which electron transitions in singly ionized helium yield photon in the 450 - 500 nm(blue) portion of the visible range, and what are their wavelengths?

Short Answer

Expert verified

Wavelength of the photons corresponding to transitions 43,84,94in the given range are 470 nm, 487 nm, and 455 nm respectively.

Step by step solution

01

Energies in the range 450- 500 nm :

When an electron transitions from a higher orbit to the lower orbit, it loses energy in the form of photons. And the energy of that photon is equal to the difference in energy of the transition states in which the transition is observed.

As you knoww that, energy of a photon

E=hcλ

Where, his Planck's constant, cis the speed of light, andλ

wavelength of photon emitted.

Here, the numerical value of is given by,

hc=1240eV.nm

Define the energy at 450nmas below.

E=hcλ=1240eV.nm450nm=2.76eV

Define the energy at as below.

E=hcλ=1240eV.nm500nm=2.49eV

02

Energies of electron in different orbits:

As you know that Energy of an electron in ‘n’ th orbit is given by,

E=-z213.6eVn2(n=1,2,3............)

Where, zis the atomic number of hydrogen-like atom and nis the principal quantum number.

En=-2213.6eVn2

En=-54.4eVn2 ...... (1)

Now, using equation (1), you get.

E1=-54.4eV,E2=-13.6eV,E3=6.04eV,E4=3.4eV,E5=2.18eV,E6=1.51eV.E7=1.11eV,E8=0.85eV,E9=0.67eV,E10=0.54eV,...

03

Energies transmitted in the range 2.76 eV and 2.49 eV:

From step 2, you get,

The transitions43.84.94will correspond to energies2.64eV,2.55eV, and2.73eVwhich are in the given range.

04

Wavelength of the transmissions:

ifE=hcλ

For432.64eV=1240eV.nmλλ=470nm

For842.55eV=1240eV.nmλ

λ=487nm

role="math" localid="1659619345623" For942.73eV=1240eV.nmλλ=455nm

05

Conclusion:

Wavelengths of the photons corresponding to transitions 43.84.94 in the given range are 470nm, 487nm and 455 nm respectively.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Imagine two classical charges of -q, each bound to a central charge of. +q One -q charge is in a circular orbit of radius R about its +q charge. The other oscillates in an extreme ellipse, essentially a straight line from it’s +q charge out to a maximum distance rmax.The two orbits have the same energy. (a) Show thatrmax=2r. (b) Considering the time spent at each orbit radius, in which orbit is the -q charge farther from its +q charge on average?

Question: Section 7.5 argues that knowing all three components of would violate the uncertainty principle. Knowing its magnitude and one component does not. What about knowing its magnitude and two components? Would be left any freedom at all and if so, do you think it would be enough to satisfy the uncertainly principle?

Taking then=3states as representative, explain the relationship between the complexity numbers of nodes and antinodes-of hydrogen's standing waves in the radial direction and their complexity in the angular direction at a given value of n. Is it a direct or inverse relationship, and why?

The space between two parallel metal plates is filled with an element in a gaseous stale. Electrons leave one plate at negligible speed and are accelerated toward the other by a potential differenceVapplied between the plates. As Vis increased from 0, the electron current increases more or less linearly, but when Vreaches 4.9 V , the current drops precipitously. From nearly 0 , it builds again roughly linearly as Vis increased beyond 4.9 V .

(a) How can the presence of the gas explain these observations?

(b) The Gas emits pure “light” when Vexceeds 4.9 V . What is its wavelength?

Consider a vibrating molecule that behaves as a simple harmonic oscillator of mass 10-27kg, spring constant 103N/m and charge is +e , (a) Estimate the transition time from the first excited state to the ground state, assuming that it decays by electric dipole radiation. (b) What is the wavelength of the photon emitted?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free