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Let me have a try!Shrodinger came up with the wave idea. Imagine you tie a 2 metre thin rope to a wall, and begin vibrating the rope up and down. Soon you will form a standing wave, the simplest one will have one loop (1st harmonic)the wave appears stationary. This is analogous to an electron in the 1st energy level. Now, if you increase the vibration then the wave vanishes but as you increase the vibration you will reach the 2nd harmonic having 2 loops, again the wave appears stationary, which is double the vibration as the 1st harmonic. This is analogous to the 2nd energy level. This also, neatly, clears up the idea that the electron cnnot just have any energy (or wavelength), but specific values to form the beautiful standing waves.
Basically in a stable atom of say hydrogen, the electron orbits the proton, they are opposite charges and there for should be attractive although the electron never falls into the proton. Why is this? Also can particles actually collide in a real physical sense and not just electrical repultion, say for example a positron and electron.Thanks in advanceAdam
Define "understood."
QuoteDefine "understood."It is proven (i.e. it comes as a result of a theory) and not postulated from empirical evidence.
Basically in a stable atom of say hydrogen, the electron orbits the proton,
Quote from: Murchie85 on 07/06/2010 15:33:37Basically in a stable atom of say hydrogen, the electron orbits the proton, They have already answered you that the electron doesn't "orbit" the proton; I would only like to ask you if you believe that the electron in the H atom is a little corpuscle.
Quote from: flr on 16/04/2013 20:33:21QuoteDefine "understood."It is proven (i.e. it comes as a result of a theory) and not postulated from empirical evidence. Science does not have the ability to prove theories right. We only have the ability to prove things wrong, make predictions and then test them. Proof is not a result of theory.Theory is a result of empirical evidence, not the other way around. Observation comes first, i.e. empirical evidence. Then from that one uses inductive logic to derive theories. Those theories are used to make predictions. Those predictions are then used to create experiments. If the experimental results are inconsistent with what was predicted then the theory has to be modified or disposed of. If the results are consistent with theory then we have a reason to believe the theory. The more predictions which are consistent the more we believe the theory. We have great number of reasons to believe quantum theory.