Modern Physics: Atomic Structure, Nuclear Processes, and Energy from Mass

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25 Terms

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Quantized energy levels

The idea that electrons in atoms can only have specific allowed energies (discrete “rungs”), not any value in a continuous range; this helps explain atomic stability and line spectra.

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Energy-level transition

A change of an electron from one allowed energy level to another; the photon energy involved equals the energy difference between the two levels (ΔE = Ehigh − Elow).

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Line emission spectrum

A spectrum consisting of bright lines at specific wavelengths, produced because atoms emit photons only for discrete energy differences between quantized levels.

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Absorption spectrum

A spectrum with dark lines at specific wavelengths where photons are absorbed to raise electrons to higher energy levels; line positions correspond to the same energy gaps as emission lines for that element.

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Photon

A particle of light that carries a discrete amount of energy; emitted or absorbed when an electron changes energy levels.

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Emission (atomic)

Process where an electron drops from a higher to a lower energy level and the atom releases a photon with energy equal to the energy drop.

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Absorption (atomic)

Process where an electron jumps from a lower to a higher energy level by absorbing a photon with exactly the required energy difference.

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Photon relationships

Equations connecting photon energy and wave properties: E = hf, c = λf, and therefore E = hc/λ (higher energy ↔ higher frequency ↔ shorter wavelength).

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Planck’s constant (h)

Constant that links photon energy to frequency in E = hf; h = 6.63 × 10^−34 J·s.

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Electron-volt (eV)

A convenient energy unit for atomic scales; 1 eV = 1.60 × 10^−19 J.

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Hydrogen Bohr energy levels

Model for hydrogen’s electron energies: E_n = −13.6 eV / n^2 (n = 1, 2, 3, …); negative sign indicates the electron is bound to the nucleus.

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Nucleons

The particles that make up the nucleus: protons and neutrons.

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Strong nuclear force

A very strong attractive force between nucleons that acts over extremely short distances and can overcome electric repulsion between protons to bind the nucleus.

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Isotope

Atoms of the same element (same number of protons) that have different numbers of neutrons, giving different mass numbers.

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Nuclear notation (^{A}_{Z}X)

Standard way to label nuclei: X is the element symbol, Z is atomic number (protons), A is mass number (protons + neutrons), and neutrons = A − Z.

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Alpha decay

A decay where the nucleus emits an alpha particle (a helium-4 nucleus): ^AZ X → ^(A−4)(Z−2) Y + ^4_2 α.

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Beta minus decay (β−)

A decay where a neutron turns into a proton and an electron is emitted: ^AZ X → ^A(Z+1) Y + ^0_−1 e (A stays the same; Z increases by 1).

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Beta plus decay (β+) / positron emission

A decay where a proton turns into a neutron and a positron is emitted: ^AZ X → ^A(Z−1) Y + ^0_+1 e (A stays the same; Z decreases by 1).

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Gamma emission

Emission of a high-energy photon from an excited nucleus: ^AZ X* → ^AZ X + γ; does not change A or Z, only the nucleus’s energy state.

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Half-life (T_1/2)

The time required for half of the undecayed nuclei in a sample to decay; used in N(t) = N0(1/2)^(t/T_1/2).

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Decay constant (λ)

Parameter describing the probability per unit time that a nucleus decays; appears in N(t) = N0 e^(−λt) and relates to half-life by T_1/2 = (ln 2)/λ.

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Mass defect

The difference between the sum of the masses of separated protons/neutrons and the mass of the bound nucleus; the “missing” mass corresponds to binding energy.

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Binding energy

Energy required to completely separate a nucleus into free protons and neutrons; equals the mass defect converted to energy (E = Δm c^2).

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Mass–energy equivalence

Principle that mass can be converted to energy; for nuclear processes the key form is ΔE = Δm c^2 (mass-energy is conserved even if mass alone changes).

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Atomic mass unit (u)

A convenient unit for nuclear masses; 1 u = 1.66 × 10^−27 kg (often paired with 1 u·c^2 ≈ 931 MeV for energy estimates).

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