Asked by Laurie
Calculate the energy of a photon emitted when an electron in a hydrogen atom undergoes a transition from n = 6 to n = 1.
Answers
Answered by
DrBob222
n1 = 1 and 1^2 = 1
n2 = 6 and 6^2 = 36
E = 2.18E-18J x (1/n1^2 - 1/n2^2)
E = 2.18E-18 J x (1/1 - 1/36)
Solve for E.
n2 = 6 and 6^2 = 36
E = 2.18E-18J x (1/n1^2 - 1/n2^2)
E = 2.18E-18 J x (1/1 - 1/36)
Solve for E.
Answered by
Natalie
for both? and then add them?
Answered by
DrBob222
No. E = 2.18E-18J x (1/1 - 1/36) =
E = 2.18E-18J x (1-0.0278) = ?
I just wrote the formula and substituted so you could see where the numbers came from.
E = 2.18E-18J x (1-0.0278) = ?
I just wrote the formula and substituted so you could see where the numbers came from.
Answered by
tyrone
Where the hell did you get 2.18x10^-18 from
Answered by
Mateo
@drbob222 shes right thoooo
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.