What is the spectrum of completely ionized hydrogen?

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Completely ionized hydrogen, which lacks its electron, cannot emit or absorb light, resulting in no spectrum. The absence of electrons means that there are no energy levels for photons to interact with. Observations from experiments, such as those conducted with hydrogen discharge tubes, support this conclusion, as emission ceases when ionization occurs. This indicates that once all hydrogen atoms are ionized, light emission stops. Therefore, the initial assertion about the spectrum of ionized hydrogen being nonexistent is correct.
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Question:
A hydrogen atom has one electron. If we heat hydrogen gas up enough, we will completely separate each electron from each hydrogen atom (called "ionization"). What will the spectrum of ionized hydrogen look like ("ionized" means that the electron has already been taken away)?

Here's what I wrote:
Because its electron is missing, and photons (and light) are created and destroyed by electrons changing energy levels, I would conclude that completely ionized hydrogen would be unable to emit or absorb light, and therefore have no spectrum.

This seems reasonable to me, but is it correct?
 
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i do think you are theoretically correct.i did an experiment with hydrogen discharge tube today and after some time the emission stopped.could it be because of all hydrogen atoms being completely ionized?
 
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