As for the atomic jiggling description, it is one of the basic introductory points in Feynmann's Six Easy Pieces. It is supposed to denote heat energy.
I don't think so...I have Feynman's SIX NOT SO EASY PIECES...but no mention there of particles nor heat energy nor 'jiggling'.
Anway, I think mfb has a good suggestion regarding 'jiggling':
I don't think that is a useful way to visualize atoms.
That's because you are asking a classical question in a quantum forum...
Hassan:
[QUOTE...is this movement simple orbital/linear displacement or is there also a "jiggling" to it?][/QUOTE]
sounds like you are using the old Bohr model:...planets orbiting a sun, electrons orbiting a nucleus model...that's an awful model to use in a quantum context. Neither describes the standing waves of modern quantum mechanics. Instead consider atoms bundles of energy waves.
Particles have localized mass/energy called quanta, the source of which are quantum fields [waves]...There are 'electron waves' in a cloud around a nucleus, not point like particles...or at least we have no evidence of any.
Illustrations here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_orbital#Orbitals_table
and be sure to note the first sentence in that section...
hydrogen-like wave functions
from another discussion:
In general, in quantum mechanics, a thing that is time-independent like a particle is described by a time-independent wave function, and does not in any sense "move". An electron does not orbit the nucleus. A particle in the ground state of a harmonic oscillator does not slosh back and forth. And elementary particles with spin do not rotate.
So a hydrogen atom has a 'spin', the angular momentum in its rest frame. This is the angular momentum contribution to the kinetic energy of a hydrogen atom, but nobody thinks the atom is 'spinning'...nor jiggling, whatever 'jiggling' means.
Also, a particle is a wave [function] until it is detected as a local quanta; as far as we can tell a detected particle is point size...without measurable dimension. That's the Standard model of particle physics: wave descriptions of particles, point like [zero size] interactions. The wave function description of a particle is of the particle itself, not a trajectory. However if you know the double slit experiment you know that the wave like nature of a particle and superposition accounts for the paths and the point like displays.
When you put a bunch of atoms together, say in a solid, their collective behavior is different from individual atoms...electrons, for example, behave differently and appear to be a different 'size' than in a free atom...photons may be absorbed by lattice vibrations, quanta/particles called phonons...and such structure vibrations reflect heat energy. This is because the structure has different degrees of freedom and so it's energy characteristics display somewhat differentl;y than the individual constituent particles.