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Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/05/2024 00:17:50Quote from: alancalverd on 03/05/2024 17:48:56No. Tunneling is an entirely different phenomenon.Are you fine with the word leap? Different phenomena.
Quote from: alancalverd on 03/05/2024 17:48:56No. Tunneling is an entirely different phenomenon.Are you fine with the word leap?
No. Tunneling is an entirely different phenomenon.
Accelerating charges emit electromagnetic radiation.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/05/2024 00:14:23He postulated that some orbits are stable, hence electrons occupying them don't radiate energy.Orbiting equals acceleration. Accelerating charges emit electromagnetic radiation. So the classical model is wrong.
He postulated that some orbits are stable, hence electrons occupying them don't radiate energy.
Which phenomena are you referring to?
Quote from: alancalverd on 04/05/2024 11:15:18Accelerating charges emit electromagnetic radiation. Not necessarily. Circulating current in a ring superconductor can stay for years with no perceivable decay.
Classical electrodynamics still applies. An accelerating charge emits em radiation, by observation. Therefore any model that involves indefinitely accelerating charges that do not emit radiation, is wrong.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 08/05/2024 13:56:44Quote from: alancalverd on 04/05/2024 11:15:18Accelerating charges emit electromagnetic radiation. Not necessarily. Circulating current in a ring superconductor can stay for years with no perceivable decay.Which is why you need quantum mechanics to explain superconductivity.
Except if you put the word quantum in the title of the model, which makes unexpected results acceptable.
stable atoms do not emit em radiation in their ground state.
An orbting electron model does not predict this, so is wrong.
The observational result is that atoms do not selfdestruct by the electrons crashing into the nuclei. What more evidence do you need, beyond the existence of stuff?
The radiation can be confined in a finite space if the wave produced by one electron is cancelled out by the wave from other electrons through destructive interference.
Hydrogen only has one electron, and it doesn't spontaneously degenerate into a neutron.
But you can dissociate H2 into 2H https://www.europhysicsnews.org/articles/epn/pdf/1980/05/epn19801105p9.pdf, and whilst the gas has some interesting properties, the atoms don't collapse.
Story of the mysterious spectral lines of Zeta Puppis, a star that seemed to challenge the atomic model proposed by Niels Bohr. In this journey quantum physics meets astronomy, learn how Bohr cleverly solved the issue and turned the that nearly dismantled his revolutionary model into a successful prediction.
Presentation of the development of Niels Bohr atomic model, which introduced quantum physics for matter. Bohr's atomic model introduced quantized electron orbits, providing a groundbreaking explanation for atomic spectra and electron behavior. This pivotal model laid the foundation for modern quantum mechanics and significantly advanced our understanding of atomic structure.11:08what Bohr proposed was that electrons can only orbit the nucleus so that their angular momentum satisfies this quantization rule so how does this quantization rule stabilize the electron around the nucleus in this so call stationary States the electron will simply not radiate yes bore made electrons stable by simply imposing that they cannot radiate contrary to Maxwell's electromagnetic theory if you feel that this is arbitrary you're not alone bore himself recognized that this was just a what if approach and then bore explored the consequences of this arbitrary Quantum condition for a point particle like the electron following a circular orbit the angular momentum is simply the product of its mass, speed, and radius using the expression for the electron speed found earlier we get a formula relating the radius and the quantum number n solving for R we find that the electron can only take discrete orbits around the nucleus that grow quadratically with n the closest orbit to the nucleus corresponds to n = 1 plugging all the constants this radius is equal to 5.3 * 10- 11 M notice that this value is remarkably similar to the the estimated size of atoms mentioned earlier this smallest distance of the electron around the nucleus is called Bohr radius.
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