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The Bohr Model of the Atom

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Chapter 4 The Bohr Model of the Atom Part 1 Visible Light Niels Bohr In 1913 Bohr published a theory about the structure of the atom based on an earlier theory of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Bohr Model of the Atom


1
Chapter 4
  • The Bohr Model of the Atom
  • Part 1

2
Visible Light
3
(No Transcript)
4
Niels Bohr
  • In 1913 Bohr published a theory about the
    structure of the atom based on an earlier theory
    of Rutherford's.
  • Bohr expanded upon this theory by proposing that
    electrons travel only in certain successively
    larger orbits.

5
Bohr Model of the Atom
  • Electrons orbit the nucleus in orbits that
    represent specific quantities of energy.
  • The energies of the electrons in the atom are
    quantized.
  • Only certain electron orbits (energy levels) are
    allowed.

The Bohr Atom
6
Niels Bohr
  • Bohr also described the way atoms emit radiation
    by suggesting that when an electron jumps from an
    outer orbit to an inner one, that it emits light.

7
Ground State
  • The lowest energy state of an atom.

8
Excited State
  • Any energy state of an atom that is higher in
    energy than the ground state.

9
Energy Absorbed
10
Absorption (Dark Line) Spectra
11
Energy Emitted
Electron jumps to a lower orbit
12
Emission (Bright Line) Spectra
13
Emission Spectra
14
The lines present in an emission spectrum are the
lines missing in an absorption spectrum.
15
(No Transcript)
16
Demonstration
  • Gas Tubes (He, Hg, Ne) and Diffraction Grating

17
(No Transcript)
18
Describe the process that occurs inside atoms
that produces the spectra?
  • Energy is absorbed by the atom.
  • The electrons jump into higher orbits and the
    atom becomes excited.
  • The electrons return to their original orbits and
    the atom returns to the ground state.
  • The electrons release energy in the form of
    visible light.
  • The specific energies (wavelengths, frequencies)
    of visible light absorbed and released produce
    the spectra.

19
Northern lights (Auroras) are one of nature's
most beautiful manifestations of the ability of
electrons to jump between quantum states
20
What Causes the Aurora
  • High speed energetic particles collide with atoms
    in Earth's atmosphere to cause the aurora. These
    high speed particles, which are usually
    electrons, originate from space, specifically
    from the solar wind, blowing outward from the
    Sun.
  • When the electrons from space strike an atom or
    molecule in Earth's atmosphere, they give one of
    the electrons in the atom an energy boost. In
    scientific jargon, the electron jumps to a higher
    energy level and the atom is in an excited state.

21
What Causes the Aurora
  • After a while, the electron in the excited atom
    jumps back down to its original lower energy
    level. It releases this energy as light causing
    the auroral glow. This process is the same
    mechanism that causes emission line spectra and
    aurora are in fact emission line spectra of the
    atoms in Earth's upper atmosphere.
  • The color of emission line spectra depends on the
    type of atom that is excited, and each type of
    atom produces its own unique pattern of colors.
    Hence, the different colors in auroral displays
    originate from different elements in Earth's
    atmosphere.

22
What Causes the Aurora
  • Oxygen molecules cause the green Aurora, and
    oxygen atoms cause the red colors. Blue auroral
    displays result from nitrogen molecules.
    Molecular nitrogen and oxygen are the most common
    constituents of Earth's atmosphere, so these are
    the most common auroral colors. Mixtures of these
    colors form the other colors of the auroras.

23
Northern Lights Video
24
Star Finder Video - Fingerprints of Light
25
Homework
  • Chapter 4 Worksheet 3
  • Continue to work on your study guide for chapter
    4 (2 pages front and back).
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