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Hydrogen atom

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Hydrogen-1

General
Name, symbol protium, 1H
Neutrons 0
Protons 1
Nuclide Data
Natural abundance 99.985%
Half-life stable
Isotope mass u
Spin ½+
Excess energy 7288.969 ± 0.001 keV
Binding energy 0.000 ± 0.0000 keV

depiction of a hydrogen-1 atom showing the Van der Waals radius and the proton nucleus.
Enlarge
depiction of a hydrogen-1 atom showing the Van der Waals radius and the proton nucleus.

An hydrogen atom is an atom of the chemical element hydrogen. It is composed of a single negatively-charged electron circling a single positively-charged proton which is the nucleus of the hydrogen atom. The electron is bound to the proton by the Coulomb force.

The hydrogen atom has special significance in quantum mechanics and quantum field theory as a simple physical system for which the solution to the Schrödinger equation is analytical, from which the positions of energy levels (thus, the frequencies of the hydrogen spectral lines) can be calculated.

In 1913, Niels Bohr had deduced the spectral frequencies of the hydrogen atom making several assumptions (see The Bohr Model). The results of Bohr for the frequencies and underlying energy values are confirmed by the full quantum-mechanical analysis which uses the Schrödinger equation, as was shown in 1925/26. The solution of the Schrödinger equation goes much further, because it also yields the shape of the electron's wave function ("orbital") for the various possible quantum-mechanical states - thus explaining the anisotropic character of atomic bonds. The Schrödinger equation also applies to more complicated atoms and molecules, however, in most cases the solution is not analytical and either computer calculations are necessary or some simplifying assumptions must be made.

Solution of Schrödinger equation: Overview of results

The solution of the Schrödinger equation for the hydrogen atom uses the fact that the Coulomb potential produced by the nucleus is isotropic (it only depends on the distance to the nucleus). Although the resulting energy eigenfunctions (the "orbitals") are not necessarily isotropic themselves, their dependence on the angular coordinates follows completely generally from this isotropy of the underlying potential: The states are not only eigenstates of the Hamiltonian, but also eigenstates of the angular momentum operator (so called spherical harmonics). This corresponds to the fact that angular momentum is conserved in the orbital motion of the electron around the nucleus. Therefore, the energy eigenstates may be classified by two angular momentum quantum numbers, l and m (integer numbers). The "angular momentum" quantum number l = 0, 1, 2, ... determines the magnitude of the angular momentum. The "magnetic" quantum number m = −l, .., +l determines the projection of the angular momentum on the (arbitrarily chosen) z-axis.

In addition, the radial dependence of the wave functions has to be found. It is only here that the details of the 1/r Coulomb potential enter (leading to Laguerre polynomials in r). This leads to a third quantum number, the principal quantum number n = 1, 2, 3, ... Note that the angular momentum quantum number can run only up to n − 1, i.e. l = 0, 1, ..., n − 1.

Due to angular momentum conservation, states of the same l but different m have the same energy (this holds for all problems with rotational symmetry). In addition, for the hydrogen atom, the states of the same n are also degenerate (i.e. they have the same energy); but this is a specialty and it is no longer true for more complicated atoms which have a (effective) potential differing from the form 1/r (due to the presence of the inner electrons shielding the nucleus potential).

Taking into account the spin of the electron adds a last quantum number, the projection of the electrons spin along the z axis, which can take on two values. Therefore, any eigenstate of the electron in the hydrogen atom is described fully by four quantum numbers. According to the usual rules of quantum mechanics, the actual state of the electron may be any superposition of these states. This explains also why the choice of z-axis for the quantization of angular momentum is immaterial: An orbital of given l and m' obtained for another preferred axis z' can always be represented as a suitable superposition of the various states of different m (but same l) that have been obtained for z.

Mathematical summary of eigenstates of hydrogen atom

The normalized position wavefunctions, given in spherical coordinates are:

:[ \psi_(\theta,\phi,r) = \sqrt ] and a0 is the Bohr radius.
  • [ L_^(\rho) ] are the Generalized Laguerre polynomials of degree n-l-1.
  • [ Y_(\theta, \phi ) ] is a spherical harmonic.
  • The eigenvalues are:
    : [ L^2 | n, l, m \rang = ^2 l(l+1) | n, l, m \rang ]
    : [ L_z | n, l, m \rang = \hbar m | n, l, m \rang ]
  • For the Hamiltonian:
  • : [ H| n, l, m \rang = E_n | n, l, m \rang ]
    where
    : [ E_n = - = - ] and α is the fine structure constant and in hydrogen atom Z=1.

    Visualizing the hydrogen electron orbitals

    Probability densities for the electron at different quantum numbers (l)
    Probability densities for the electron at different quantum numbers (l)

    The image to the right shows the first few hydrogen atom orbitals (energy eigenfunctions). These are cross-sections of the probability density that are color-coded (black=zero density, white=highest density). The angular momentum quantum number l is denoted in each column, using the usual spectroscopic letter code ("s" means l = 0; "p": l = 1; "d": l = 2). The main quantum number n (= 1, 2, 3, ...) is marked to the right of each row. For all pictures the magnetic quantum number m has been set to 0, and the cross-sectional plane is the xz-plane (z is the vertical axis). The probability density in three-dimensional space is obtained by rotating the one shown here around the z-axis.

    The "ground state", i.e. the state of lowest energy, in which the electron is usually found, is the first one, the "1s" state (n = 1, l = 0).

    [An image with more orbitals] is also available (up to higher numbers n and l).

    Note the number of black lines that occur in each but the first orbital. These are "nodal lines" (which are actually nodal surfaces in three dimensions). Their total number is always equal to n − 1, which is the sum of the number of radial nodes (equal to n - l - 1) and the number of angular nodes (equal to l).

    Features going beyond the Schrödinger solution

    There are several important effects that are neglected by the Schrödinger equation and which are responsible for certain small but measurable deviations of the real spectral lines from the predicted ones:

    Both of these features (and more) are incorporated in the relativistic Dirac equation, whose predictions come still closer to experiment. It can still be solved exactly for the hydrogen atom. The resulting states now must be classified by the total angular momentum number j (arising through the coupling between electron spin and orbital angular momentum). States of the same j and the same n are still degenerate.

    For these developments, it was essential that the solution of the Dirac equation for the hydrogen atom could be worked out exactly, such that any experimentally observed deviation had to be taken seriously as a signal of failure of the theory.

    See also

    |- style="text-align: center;" | width="30%" | (no lighter isotopes) | width="40%" | Isotopes of Hydrogen | width="30%" | Hydrogen-2 |- style="text-align: center;" | Produced from:
    See proton emission | Decay chain | Decays to:
    Stable

    References

    Section 4.2 deals with the hydrogen atom specifically, but all of Chapter 4 is relevant.

    External links

     


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