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Chapters 15-20 Online Course Evaluation www.pa.uky.edu • • • • • Chapter 15:14,18,20,22,23,26,50,62 Chapter 16:15,16,19,24,25,43,45,63 Chapter 17:12,34,35,36 Chapter 18:7,8,9,13,14,45,47 Chapter 19: 7,8,18,19,20,27,28,29, 30,31,34,38,40,45,46,53,56,63,65,66 • Chapter 20:10,11,16,18,19,23,24,25,30, 33,35,58,61,63 (Reduced to 68 from 95 problems) Equations Associated with The Bohr Model Line and Absorption Spectra Electron’s angular momentum L=Iω=mvrn=nh/2π, n=1,2,3 n is called quantum number of the orbit hf=Eu- El hc/λ=Eu - El 1/λ=(1/hc)Eu- El Radius of a circular orbit rn=n2h2/4π2mkZe2=(n2/Z)r1 where r1=h2/4π2mke2=5.29x10-11 m (n=1) r1 is called Bohr radius, the smallest orbit in H Total energy for an electron in the nth orbit: En=(-2π2Z2e4mk2/h2)(1/n2)=(Z2/n2)E1 where E1=-2π2Z2e4mk2/h2 =-13.6 eV (n=1) E1 is called Ground State of the hydrogen 1/λ=(2π2Z2e4mk2/ch3)(1/nl2-1/nu2) Both orbits and energies depend on n, the quantum number Question: With increasing quantum number, the energy difference between adjacent energy levels (a) decreases (b) remains the same (c) increases (d) sometimes decreases and sometimes increases Answer: a Question: An atom emits a photon when one of its electrons (a) collides with another of its electrons (b) is removed from the atom (c) undergoes a transition to a quantum state of lower energy (d) undergoes a transition to a quantum state of higher energy Answer: c Question: The bright-line spectrum produced by the excited atoms of an element contains wavelength that (a) are the same for all elements (b) are characteristic of the particular element (c) are evenly distributed throughout the entire visible spectrum (d) are different from the wavelength in its darkline spectrum ¾ The presence of definite energy levels in an atom is true for all atoms. Quantization is characteristic of many quantities in nature ¾ Bohr’s theory worked well for hydrogen and for one-electron ions. But it did not prove as successful for multielectrons. ¾ It is quantum mechanics that finally solved the problems Answer: b Early Quantum Theory ¾ Quantum energy: E=hf ¾ Photoelectric effect: hf=KEmax+Wo ¾ De Broglie wavelength: λ=h/mv ¾ Bohr theory: L=mvr=nh/2π En=E1/n2 where E1=-13.6 eV ¾ Wave-particle duality Limitations of the Bohr Theory ¾Unable to predict the line spectra for more complex atoms ¾Unable to predict the brightness of spectral lines of hydrogen ¾Unable to explain the fine structure ¾Unable to explain bonding of atoms in molecules, solids and liquids ¾Unable to really resolve the wave-particle duality Quantum Mechanics ¾It solves all these problems and has explained a wide range of physical phenomena. ¾It works on all scales of size. Classical physics is an approximation of quantum physics ¾It uses an abstract mathematical formulation dealing with probabilities Chapter 29 Nuclear Physics Nuclear Structure Binding Energy Radioactivity (α,β, and γ Decay) A tiny positively charge object: Nucleus ¾The elements exist by virtue of the ability of nuclei to hold multiple electric charges ¾The energy involved in nearly all natural processes has its ultimate origin in nuclear reactions and transformation Atomic Nuclei consist of Protons and Neutrons Proton Positive charge, e=1.6x10-19 C mproton=1.673x10-27 kg Neutron Uncharged mneutron=1.675x10-27 kg Except in H, the number of neutrons equals or,more often, exceeds the number of protons. Atomic number Z: The number of protons (or electrons) Atomic mass number A The number of protons and neutrons Atomic mass unit 1u=1.66x10-27 kg me=0.000549u,mp=1.007277u, mn=1.007825u Isotopes Nuclei that contain the same number of protons and different numbers of neutrons Nuclear radius r≈(1.2x10-15m)(A1/3) Binding Energy Nucleus (smaller mass) Separated nucleons (greater mass) Binding Energy ¾ Atomic nuclei always have less mass than the combined masses of their separated particles. ¾ The “missing” mass of a nucleus is called its binding energy, the energy needed to break it up into separate protons and neutrons. ¾ Average binding energy per nucleon equals total binding energy divided by A Question: Relative to the sum of the masses of its constituent nucleons, the mass of a nucleus is a. greater b. the same c. smaller d. sometimes greater and sometimes smaller Answer: c Region of greatest stability The higher the binding energy per nucleon, the more stable the nucleus. Nuclei of intermediate size (A=50-80) are the most stable. Question: The element whose nuclei contains the most tightly bound nucleons is a. Helium b. Carbon c. Iron d. Uranium Answer: c What holds nuclei together? Strong nuclear force between nucleons, the third fundamental force. ¾ The strongest of all the fundamental forces by far. ¾ Short range, effective only over a few nucleon diameters, ~10-15 m The short range of nuclear forces is responsible for the restricted number of stable elements The larger a nucleus, the stronger the electric repulsive forces that act on each of its proton, the attractive strong nuclear forces on each nucleon cannot increase indefinitely because only a limited number of other nucleons are close enough to interact with it. An unstable nucleus comes apart, and results in Radioactivity Strong nuclear force (Short range, 10-15 m) Electric force F21 +Q2 +Q1 F 12 r12 F12 = k Q1Q2 r122 Electric force There are three radioactive decay mechanisms α-decay: emission of an a-particle (He-nucleus) β-decay: emission of an electron γ-decay: emission of a high energy photon α γ β Why α decay? α decay occurs because the short range strong nuclear force is unable to hold very large nuclei together Why α particle? α particle is very strongly bond, the mass is significantly less than that of four separate nucleons Weak Nucleus Force In β decay, it is the weak nucleus force that plays the crucial role: the neutrino interacts with the matter via the weak force. It is effective over a range of 10-17 m The electron are created within the nucleus itself: n p + e-. It is Not an orbital electron The mass and proton numbers do not change, the daughter nucleus is simply the parent nucleus with less energy. Parent nucleus and daughter nucleus are different Parent nucleus and daughter nucleus are the same Parent nucleus and daughter nucleus are different