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Class XII · Physics · Atomic Spectra · Lecture

Atomic Spectra

The full, readable lecture — how the atom went from a "plum pudding" to a tiny nucleus, why Bohr forced electrons onto fixed quantized orbits, the energy-level ladder Eₙ = −13.6/n², how jumps between rungs emit and absorb photons, the hydrogen line spectrum and its Lyman, Balmer and Paschen series, the Rydberg formula, X-rays, and lasers. As you scroll, the panel on the right plays out each idea with an everyday object you already know — a hailstorm on a sheet, a staircase, a barcode, a torch beam.

By 1900 the atom was a puzzle. J. J. Thomson pictured it as a "plum-pudding" — a smooth ball of positive charge with electrons studded throughout it like raisins. It seemed reasonable, but it was wrong, and one beautiful experiment proved it.

Rutherford's gold-foil experiment (Geiger & Marsden, 1909) fired fast, positively-charged alpha particles at a sheet of gold leaf only a few atoms thick. If the plum-pudding were right, the diffuse charge should barely deflect them.

  • Most passed straight through — so the atom is mostly empty space.
  • A few were deflected, and about 1 in 8000 bounced almost straight back — "as if you fired a shell at tissue paper and it came back at you."
  • Conclusion — the positive charge and nearly all the mass are concentrated in a minute, dense nucleus at the centre; electrons orbit far outside it.
Exam point: the rare large-angle scatter is the key evidence. It requires a tiny, concentrated positive nucleus — impossible for Thomson's spread-out pudding.

Rutherford's atom had a fatal flaw: a circling electron should radiate energy and spiral into the nucleus in a fraction of a second. In 1913 Niels Bohr fixed it with a bold postulate — electrons may occupy only certain allowed orbits, and in these stationary states they do not radiate.

Think of a staircase, not a ramp: on a ramp you can stand at any height, but on a staircase you can only stand on a step. An electron is the same — it sits on an allowed orbit or jumps to another, but it can never hover in between.

Bohr's quantum conditionmvr = n · (h / 2π)    n = 1, 2, 3, …
angular momentum is quantized in steps of h/2π
  1. Each orbit is labelled by a whole number n, the principal quantum number.
  2. An electron in a stationary state has a fixed energy and emits no radiation.
  3. Radiation appears only when the electron jumps between orbits.
Why "quantized"? Only whole numbers of n are allowed — there is no orbit 1.5. The atom's energies come in discrete steps, which is exactly why its light comes in sharp lines, not a smear.

Solving Bohr's model for hydrogen gives the energy of the electron in the n-th orbit. The energies are negative — the electron is bound, trapped in the nucleus's pull — and they climb towards zero as n increases.

Energy of the n-th level (hydrogen)Eₙ = −13.6 / n²   eV
E₁ = −13.6 eV · E₂ = −3.40 eV · E₃ = −1.51 eV · E∞ = 0

Picture an energy ladder whose rungs bunch up near the top. The bottom rung (n = 1, the ground state) is deep down at −13.6 eV; each higher rung is closer to its neighbour, crowding together towards 0 eV at the top.

Level nEnergy EₙName
1−13.6 eVground state
2−3.40 eVfirst excited
3−1.51 eVsecond excited
0 eVionised (free)
Ionisation energy of hydrogen = the climb from n = 1 to n = ∞ = 0 − (−13.6) = 13.6 eV — the energy to tear the electron free.

Light is born when an electron jumps between rungs. When it falls from a higher level to a lower one, the lost energy leaves the atom as a single photon — a flash of light whose colour is fixed by exactly how far it fell.

Bohr's frequency conditionhf = E_high − E_low
E = hf = hc / λ   (h = 6.63 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s)
  • Emission — electron drops down a rung → atom releases a photon (a flash). Bigger fall → higher frequency → bluer light.
  • Absorption — atom swallows a photon of the exact right energy → electron climbs up a rung. The reverse process.

Like stepping down a stair releases a click of sound, an electron stepping down releases a flash of light — and only the exact step energies are allowed, so only certain colours ever appear.

Key idea: the photon's energy must match the gap exactly. A photon that is too big or too small is simply ignored — which is why each element absorbs and emits its own fixed set of colours.

Because only fixed energy gaps exist, hydrogen emits light at only a few sharp wavelengths — a line spectrum, not a continuous rainbow. The lines group into series by the level the electron lands on.

SeriesElectron falls toRegion
Lymann = 1ultraviolet (UV)
Balmern = 2visible
Paschenn = 3infrared (IR)

The pattern is a barcode fingerprint of colours: every element has its own unique set of lines. Astronomers read the bright and dark lines in starlight to tell exactly which elements a distant star is made of.

Exam point: the Balmer series falls in the visible band, so it is the one you actually see — including the famous red H-alpha line (n = 3 → 2). Lyman is in the UV, Paschen in the IR.

Long before Bohr, Johannes Rydberg found an empirical formula that reproduces every hydrogen line with stunning accuracy. Bohr's model later explained why it works.

Rydberg formula1/λ = R (1/n₁² − 1/n₂²)   (n₂ > n₁)
R = 1.097 × 10⁷ m⁻¹  ·  n₁ = lower level, n₂ = upper level
  1. n₁ sets the series — n₁ = 1 Lyman, n₁ = 2 Balmer, n₁ = 3 Paschen.
  2. n₂ is the higher level the electron started in.
  3. R is the Rydberg constant; 1/λ is the wavenumber.
balmer — the H-alpha line
Find λ for the n = 3 → 2 (Balmer) transition.
1/λ = R (1/2² − 1/3²) = 1.097×10⁷ (0.25 − 0.111)
1/λ = 1.097×10⁷ × 0.1389 = 1.524×10⁶ m⁻¹
λ = 656 nm — red light

X-rays are very short-wavelength, high-energy electromagnetic waves. They are produced in an X-ray tube: a heated filament boils off electrons, a large voltage (tens of kilovolts) accelerates them to enormous speed, and they crash into a metal target (often tungsten).

  • How they form — the fast electrons are abruptly stopped by the target; their lost kinetic energy is radiated as X-ray photons.
  • Maximum energy — when an electron gives up all its energy at once: hf_max = eV, the accelerating voltage sets the shortest wavelength.
  • Properties — they travel in straight lines, are not deflected by fields, and penetrate flesh but not bone or metal.
Shortest-wavelength (cut-off) X-rayeV = hf_max = hc / λ_min   ⟹   λ_min = hc / (eV)
Uses: medical imaging of bones and teeth, CT scans, airport security scanners, and crystallography (revealing the structure of DNA and proteins). Over-exposure is harmful — they are ionising radiation.

A LASER (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) makes a beam that is monochromatic (one colour), coherent (all waves in step) and tightly collimated (a thin, parallel beam).

  • Stimulated emission — a passing photon nudges an excited atom to emit a second, identical photon: same energy, same direction, same phase. One photon becomes two, two become four — light is amplified.
  • Population inversion — to amplify rather than absorb, more atoms must be in the upper state than the lower one. This unnatural condition is set up by pumping energy in.
  • Optical cavity — two mirrors bounce the light back and forth, building up an avalanche; one mirror is slightly leaky and lets the beam out.

Uses: CD/DVD/Blu-ray players, barcode scanners, fibre-optic communication, surgery and eye correction, cutting and welding, distance measurement and surveying.

  1. Gold-foil: most alphas pass, a few bounce back → tiny dense nucleus.
  2. Bohr: electrons on quantized orbits (a staircase); no radiation in a stationary state.
  3. Energy levels: Eₙ = −13.6/n² eV; ground state n = 1; ionisation = 13.6 eV.
  4. Photons: hf = E_high − E_low; emission down, absorption up.
  5. Hydrogen spectrum: Lyman (UV), Balmer (visible), Paschen (IR) — a fingerprint.
  6. Rydberg: 1/λ = R(1/n₁² − 1/n₂²).
  7. X-rays: fast electrons hit a metal target; eV = hc/λ_min.
  8. Lasers: stimulated emission + population inversion → coherent light.
🧭 Live panelAtomic Spectra
Scroll the lecture — this panel plays each concept with an everyday object as you reach it.