7.16: Return to the Hydrogen Atom
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We have until now talked about the "levels" n=1,2,3… of hydrogen, and the Lyman and Balmer "lines" connecting them. This nomenclature is now suspect.
In its lowest configuration the sole electron in hydrogen is in the K-shell and has n=1. The only possible l-value is zero, and hence the lowest configuration in hydrogen is 1s. This single electron has l=0 and s=1/2, and hence for the atom L=0 and S=1/2. Thus the only term in the K-shell is 2S, and this has but a single level, 2S1/2. (We are not considering here the very small contribution made by the spin of the nucleus; this is unimportant for most contexts in optical spectroscopy, but is important - VERY important - in the microwave region.)
In the L-shell, n=2, and hence the electron can be in an s-orbital or a p-orbital. (See section 7.12 to recall the phrase "the electron is in a p-orbital".) That is, the configuration can be 2s or 2p. In either case, of course, s=1/2, so that the two possible terms in the L-shell are 2S (with one level, 2S1/2) and 2P (with two levels, 2P1/2 and 2P3/2).
I leave it up to the honour and integrity of the reader to convince him/herself that the possible configurations for n=3 are 3s, 3p or 3d. There are three terms: 2S, 2P and 2D, 5 levels (write down the J-levels of each) and 18 states.
In brief, although we have hitherto talked about the n=1, 2, 3 levels, this is all right for n=1, but n=2 is three levels in two terms, and n=3 is five levels in three terms.
The term values of the nine levels included in n=1,2 and 3 are as follows, in μm−1. I have also written out the statistical weight 2J+1 of each level.
3d 2D529.749234263d 2D329.749230643p 2Po329.749230643s 2S129.749220823p 2Po129.749219822p 2Po328.225927242s 2S128.225894222p 2Po128.225890721s 2S120.00000002
Notice that the statistical weights of the K, L and M shells (n=1,2,3) are, respectively, 2, 8 and 18 - i.e 2n2, as explained in section 7.11. In section 7.9 (see especially immediately following equation 7.9.2), before the introduction of electron spin, we had deduced that the statistical weight of each shell was just n2; the introduction of electron spin has doubled that.
So just how many transitions are there in the "line" Hα? We cannot answer that until we have familiarized ourselves with the selection rules, but I make it that Hα comprises three transition arrays, three multiplets, seven lines, and I'm not sure just how many components! We'll come back to this in section 7.24..