University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780321973610
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 41, Problem 41.18E
(a)
To determine
The splitting of the
(b)
To determine
Which
(c)
To determine
plot energy level diagram that shows the
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A magnetic field is applied to a freely floating uniform iron sphere with radius R = 2.00 mm. The sphere initially had no net magnetic moment, but the field aligns 12% of the magnetic moments of the atoms (that is, 12% of the magnetic moments of the loosely bound electrons in the sphere, with one such electron per atom). The magnetic moment of those aligned electrons is the sphere’s intrinsic magnetic moment .What is the sphere’s resulting angular speed v?
A hydrogen atom is in a d state. In the absence of an external magnetic field, the states with different ml values have (approximately) the same energy. Consider the interaction of the magnetic field with the atom’s orbital magnetic dipole moment.
(a) Calculate the splitting (in electron volts) of the ml levels when the atom is put in a 0.800 T magnetic field that is in the +z@direction.
(b) Which ml level will have the lowest energy?
(c) Draw an energy-level diagram that shows the d levels with and without the external magnetic field.
(a) What is the magnitude of the orbital angular momentum in a state with e = 2? (b) What is the magnitude of its largest projection
on an imposed axis?
(a) Number
2.50998008
Units
J.s
(b) Number
2.11
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Chapter 41 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 41.1 - Prob. 41.1TYUCh. 41.2 - Prob. 41.2TYUCh. 41.3 - Prob. 41.3TYUCh. 41.4 - In this section we assumed that the magnetic field...Ch. 41.5 - In which of the following situations is the...Ch. 41.6 - Prob. 41.6TYUCh. 41.7 - Prob. 41.7TYUCh. 41.8 - Prob. 41.8TYUCh. 41 - Prob. 41.1DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.2DQ
Ch. 41 - Prob. 41.3DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.4DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.5DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.6DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.7DQCh. 41 - In the ground state of the helium atom one...Ch. 41 - Prob. 41.9DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.10DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.11DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.12DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.13DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.14DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.15DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.16DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.17DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.18DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.19DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.20DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.21DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.22DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.23DQCh. 41 - Prob. 41.1ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.2ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.3ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.4ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.5ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.6ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.7ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.8ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.9ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.10ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.11ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.12ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.13ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.14ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.15ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.16ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.17ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.18ECh. 41 - A hydrogen atom in a 3p state is placed in a...Ch. 41 - Prob. 41.20ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.21ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.22ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.23ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.24ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.25ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.26ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.27ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.28ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.29ECh. 41 - (a) Write out the ground-state electron...Ch. 41 - Prob. 41.31ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.32ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.33ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.34ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.35ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.36ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.37ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.38ECh. 41 - Prob. 41.39PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.40PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.41PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.42PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.43PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.44PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.45PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.46PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.47PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.48PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.49PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.50PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.51PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.52PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.53PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.54PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.55PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.56PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.57PCh. 41 - Effective Magnetic Field. An electron in a...Ch. 41 - Prob. 41.59PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.60PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.61PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.62PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.63PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.64PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.65PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.66PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.67PCh. 41 - Prob. 41.68CPCh. 41 - Prob. 41.69CPCh. 41 - Prob. 41.70PPCh. 41 - Prob. 41.71PPCh. 41 - Prob. 41.72PPCh. 41 - Prob. 41.73PP
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- An election in a hydrogen atom is in 3p state. Find the smallest angle the magnetic moment makes with the z-axis. (Express your answer in terms of µB.)arrow_forwardFor an electron in a hydrogen atom in the n=2 state, compute: (a) the angular momentum; (b) the kinetic energy; (c) the potential energy; and (d) the total energy.arrow_forwardWhat is the full electron configuration in the groundstate for elements with Z equal to (a) 26, (b) 34, (c) 38?arrow_forward
- where ?∞ = 1.097 × 10^7 m−1is the Rydberg constant and ? is the atomic number (thenumber of protons found in the nucleus). Calculate the ground state energy of a triplyionised beryllium atom, Be3+ (a beryllium atom with three electrons removed).arrow_forwardFor a helium atom in its ground state, what are quantum numbers (n,L, mL and nL ) for the (a) spin-up electron and (b) spindown electron?arrow_forwardAn electron in the ground state of hydrogen atom is revolving in anticlockwise direction in a circular orbit of radius R (see figure). (a) Obtain an expression for the orbital magnetic moment of the electron. (b) The atom is placed in a uniform magnetic induction B such that the normal to the AB 30° plane of electron's orbit makes an angle of 30° with the magnetic induction. Find the torque experienced by the orbiting electron.arrow_forward
- You are working on determining the angle that separates two hybridized orbitals. In the process of determining the coefficients in front of the various atomic orbitals, you align the first one along the z-axis and the second in the x/z-plane (so o = 0). The second hybridized orbital was determined to be: W2 = R1s + R2p, sin 0 + R2p, cos 0 Determine the angle, 0, in degrees to one decimal place (XX.X) that separates these two orbitals. Assume that the angle will be between 0 and 90 degrees.arrow_forwardMeasurements made on the line spectrum emitted by a certain atom of intermediate Z show that the ratio of the separation energies between three adjacent levels of increasing energy in a particular multiplet is approximately 3 to 5 (that is the energy difference between the second and the third member of the multiplet is 5/3 of the energy difference between the first and the second member of the multiplet.) a) What are the j' quantum number that can be assigned to these states? b) What is the l' quantum number that can be assigned to these states? c) What is the s' quantum number that can be assigned to these states?arrow_forwardZirconium (Z = 40) has two electrons in an incomplete d subshell. (a) What are the values of n and ℓ, for each electron? (b) What are all possible values of mℓ, and ms ? (c) What is the electron configuration in the ground state of zirconium?arrow_forward
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