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hys

auscentral.com|auspal.com
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Jul 20, 2002
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Assess the contribution made by Heissenberg and Pauli to the development of atomic theory.

Does anyone know how to answer this

and what was the atomic theory

assess- Make a judgement of value, quality, outcomes, results or size
 

Marianna

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Aug 12, 2002
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78
pauli's exclusion principle-

no two electrons can have the set of quantum numbers
 

spice girl

magic mirror
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Aug 10, 2002
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785
Originally posted by Marianna
pauli's exclusion principle-

no two electrons can have the set of quantum numbers
thus it explains why the n'th shell has 2n^2 electrons at max, and also why the periodic table is structured like so

if u really want the details:
n - principal quantum number: progresses from 1, 2, 3, ...

for each n, we can divide the electrons in terms of:
l - angular quantum no.: takes values of 0, 1, 2, ..., (n-1)
e.g. in the 4th shell l can take values of 0, 1, 2, 3

for each l, we have:
ml - magnetic quantum no.: takes values of -l, -(l-1), ..., -1, 0, 1, ..., (l-1), l.
e.g. the 3rd subshell (l = 2): ml = -2, -1, 0, 1, 2

for each ml, we have:
ms - spin quantum no.: takes values of -1/2, +1/2:
i.e. there are two electrons in any magnetic quantum state.

so say n = 6 (6th shell)
we have l = 0, 1, ..., 5
at l = x, we have (2x+1) magnetic spin states, each with two electrons.
so if l = x, we have (4x+2) electrons.
thus, at n=6, we have (4*0 + 2) + (4*1 + 2) + ... + (4*5 + 2)
= 2 + 6 + 10 + 14 + 18 + 22 = 72 = 2*(6^2) electrons possible.

******************
there you go. You don't need it this complicated. I just feel a bit bored...
 

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