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It was.I looked at a test tube full of hydrogen.
Can you tell us more about your experience?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 02/01/2022 02:43:57Can you tell us more about your experience? It looked like a test tube full of air.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/01/2022 10:17:00Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 02/01/2022 02:43:57Can you tell us more about your experience? It looked like a test tube full of air.It looks like I have to do the experiment myself.
What do you expect to see?Hydrogen looks like air.
No visible light interacts with hydrogen except via scattering.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 01/01/2022 11:18:32No visible light interacts with hydrogen except via scattering.If this is true, then the absorption spectrum of hydrogen is a misnomer. We should call it scattering spectrum instead.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 31/12/2021 10:30:27It's important to remember that hydrogen gas in a tube is composed of molecules, rather than atoms.Does it apply for both emission and absorption spectra? If the laser has a very narrow bandwidth, eventually all electrons in level 2 will go up to level 3. This will make the gas unable to absorb the laser anymore. Is there an experiment demonstrating this hypothesis?
It's important to remember that hydrogen gas in a tube is composed of molecules, rather than atoms.
I guess it's significantly lower than melting point of glass.
I learned that the gas could turn into plasma when exposed to microwave, or high AC voltage from Tesla coil. But they are relatively low frequency radiation compared to what causes photoelectric effect on metals.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 02/01/2022 21:49:08 I guess it's significantly lower than melting point of glass.Very roughly 10,000 degrees.Hot enough to boil glass (and anything else).
Emission spectra can be produced in a bench-top (or hand-held) vapor discharge lamp. Low pressure H2 can be broken down by a high voltage: https://www.flinnsci.com/hydrogen-gas-spectrum-tube/ap1334/As an undergraduate student in a general chemistry laboratory class, I used such devices (for many different elements) as well as a diffraction grating to observe their emission spectra.I have observed the absorption spectrum of H by analysis of the light from the sun (dark line spectrum, or "Fraunhofer lines")
I've seen a diagram in a physics article showing that hot hydrogen gas produces emission spectra while cool hydrogen produces absorption spectra. How far from the truth can it be?
does the hot gas emit observable thermal radiation? Is there any resemblance to the black body radiation?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 03/01/2022 04:51:03I've seen a diagram in a physics article showing that hot hydrogen gas produces emission spectra while cool hydrogen produces absorption spectra. How far from the truth can it be?Cold hydrogen will not emit, only hot. Both hot and cold will absorb.
https://casswww.ucsd.edu/archive/public/tutorial/Stars.htmlUniversity of California, San DiegoCenter for Astrophysics & Space SciencesWe may consider three principal types of spectra which appear when the light from an object is broken up into its component wavelengths or "dispersed":a continuous spectrum or continuum; the emission of a thermal spectrum is one type of continuum.an absorption spectrum or sometimes an absorption-line spectrum.an emission spectrum or emission-line spectrum.