Do Electron's move around an atom?

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In summary, the majority of science teachers believe that electrons move in orbits around an atom, but it is actually incorrect. Electrons exist as probability wave functions and while they may have orbital angular momentum, they do not physically move in orbits. The concept of stationary is also not applicable to these wave functions. The electron's energy levels are referred to as orbitals, not orbits. When measured, electrons randomly choose a place to go, but when not being measured, they exist in all possible forms at once. Relativity also plays a role in understanding the motion of electrons. The electron's wave function is not a physical object and does not move like a planet around the sun.
  • #1
simon009988
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The majority of the science teachers in my school agree that electrons do move in orbits around an atom in a physical way but I disagree I see them as wave functions/ clouds that are stationary. Who's right?
 
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  • #2
Well your certainly right that they do not move in orbits around the atom. That's was Bohr's model of the atom and it is incorrect, but it is still taught because it is easy to work with and useful for some problems. Electrons do exist as probability wave functions, although I'm not sure if stationary is the correct word to use. It gets complicated, and I'm certainly not the best person to try to go into details on this, but at least in a hydrogen atom, the sum of the probabilty functions for the states with the same principal quantum number produces a spherically symmetric distribution, so I suppose you could think of the probability function as being stationary relative to the atom.
 
  • #3
And the energy levels are referred to as orbitals, not orbits, for the very reason that they're indistinct as to position.
 
  • #4
Electrons do not move around the atoms. In Bohr model, Bohr had to postulate (3rd postulate) that electrons do not radiate electromagnetic energy according to the classical electrodynamic laws because they would loose energy and fall to the core in (I don't know exactly now) about 10^-15 s.

But it is interesting that in for example hydrogen atom you get the same result of electron energy levels using Schroedinger equation and 3rd Bohr postulate (using hypothesis that electron really moves in circle and that it can have angular momentum just n x h trans, n=1,2,...)
 
  • #5
When you measure the elctron and the wave function collapses the electron randomly picks a place to go, and then a different place next time; So does that mean it is moving in between checks?
 
  • #6
No. It means that it goes back into the superposition of eigenstates it was in before you made the measurement it.
 
  • #7
inha said:
No. It means that it goes back into the superposition of eigenstates it was in before you made the measurement it.

when you stop measuring the atom does it instantly go back to it's wavefunction form?
 
  • #8
simon009988 said:
The majority of the science teachers in my school agree that electrons do move in orbits around an atom in a physical way but I disagree I see them as wave functions/ clouds that are stationary. Who's right?

Because the electronic wavefunctions have orbital angular momentum, I consider them to be "moving".

The question as stated doesn't have a really definite ansewr, because the observables in QM are position and momentum, not velocity.

Another argument for moving electrons - relativity matters to quantum mechanics, for instance relativistic calculations of gold give its correct color, while non-relativistic calculations give a silver color. The fact that relativistic corrections exist is somewhat easier to explain if one thinks of the electrons as moving.
 
  • #9
simon009988 said:
when you stop measuring the atom does it instantly go back to it's wavefunction form?
It doesn't exactly ever leave that form; it just 'chooses' which of the many possible forms to adopt. I'm probably not stating this properly, because it's not one of my specialties. Everything exists in all possible forms (eigenstates) at once until acted upon by an external influence such as observation. The act of observing forces a decision as to which is 'real', and that 'reality' is what we observe. It's still a wave function, but a single one rather than many. Since the act of observation alters the condition of that state, it is undetermined again immediately following the observation.
Hope I didn't make matters worse with that input.
 
  • #10
This partly answers a question I was going to ask but perhaps I have got this wrong .I read that in the p,d,and f orbitals the node seems to pass through the nucleus , which is the 1 place where the electron has a zero probability of being found. So It cannot be moving round the nucleus in a path which passes through this point to get to the other lobes of its orbital.Therfore it cannot be orbiting the nucleus.
 
  • #11
pervect said:
Because the electronic wavefunctions have orbital angular momentum, I consider them to be "moving".

When you say "moving" do you mean the electron is moving like planets around the sun or the wave function itself is moving?
 
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  • #12
The wave function is not a physical object, it can't move.
 
  • #13
pervect said:
Because the electronic wavefunctions have orbital angular momentum, I consider them to be "moving".

If electrons do move, won't then the collapses of wave functions not be random any more?
 
  • #14
One point about that is that in order to know that they're moving, you have to observe them. Back to interference. It's like if you fire a BB gun into a swarm of gnats. When you recover the BB and find a squished gnat stuck to it, you know that the gnat was once somewhere along the BB's trajectory. It no longer is, though.
Okay, that was a pretty lame analogy. I'm tired and hung over, so gimme a break. :tongue:
 
  • #15
or like sending a rocket through an asteroid field
 
  • #16
Well... hopefully the pilot could avoid the asteroids.
 
  • #17
simon009988 said:
When you say "moving" do you mean the electron is moving like planets around the sun or the wave function itself is moving?

Neither one. Treating electrons like planets invites problems, and the wave function itself is a mathematical abstraction.

[Some of] the electrons have orbital angular momentum, which is a bit hard to explain if you think of all of them as "standing still".

(It's been a while so I had to double-check this - it turns out some quantum states of the electron do have zero angular orbital momentum. I do think it's fair to think of the electrons with no linear momentum and no angular momentum as "not moving").

Because you can't assign a definite position to an electron, you can't find it's velocity, which is the rate of change of position with respect to time. But you can still assign it a momentum and an angular momentum.

Thus the closest quantum mechanical equivalent of "motion"" is momentum. It's a mistake to think of quantum phenomenon as being classical - Bell's theorem shows the pitfalls in assuming that quantum particles are classical ones with "hidden variables". If it weren't for the pitfalls involved with hidden variables, one could assume that the electron always had a definite position, but that it wasn't known. Unfortunately this application of hidden variables leads to contradictions as Bell's theorem illustrates. Therfore one cannot assume an electron has a definite position, and neither can one assume that it has a velocity.
 
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  • #18
Some excellent responses so far. Here's my understanding of the situation:

simon009988 said:
The majority of the science teachers in my school agree that electrons do move in orbits around an atom in a physical way but I disagree I see them as wave functions/ clouds that are stationary. Who's right?

The answer here is pretty clearcut -- you're absolutely right. The only minor ambiguity is in our definition of stationary, as was pointed out later in the thread. In the rest frame of the nucleus, the ground state wave function that describes the electron cloud does not change with time unless acted upon by outside forces (such as a photon). Whether or not the electron itself is stationary...well, let's step back a bit and look at the big picture.

One of the things that made quantum mechanics such a revolutionary theory was the idea that, as far as our experiments were concerned, particles could not always be said to have definite values of position and momentum. This led to the idea that, in general, a particle's position or momentum was not a single number, but instead a superposition of states, each with a different value of position or momentum (depending on which set of states you're looking at). Again, in general, this means that a particle is not said to have this position or this velocity, but rather some combination of positions and/or velocities. This idea is expressed by the wave function which, when its norm is squared, will give you the probability that you measure a particular position or velocity for the particle.

So what does this mean for our electron cloud? Well, the "cloud" is basically the wave function I mentioned before, so it tells us how likely a particle is to be in a particular place. Another way of looking at this is that it gives us a superposition of answers to the question, "where is the electron?". Since most of the answers to this question are relegated to the space very near the nucleus of the atom, we won't notice this superposition unless our instruments are very sensitive. That is, in the classical limit, we'll just give the electron a single position.

The same is true for the momentum. In general, a stationary state of an atom (that is, one where the electron's wave function doesn't change with time) will have a "cloud" of momenta and, since velocity is just the momentum over the mass, a "cloud" of velocities. Be cautious in interpreting this, however, because it's not a cloud in space (that is, a given position is not associated with a particular velocity), it's a cloud in momentum space. Anyway, this gives us a means of answering -- or generating a superposition of answers to -- the question, "Is the electron moving?" In general, the state of the electron will include both "yes" and "no" answers.

This has the additional caveat that, from the theoretical point of view, the space of possible velocities is continuous. This means that the "no" answer actually takes up an infinitesimally small portion of the space, so for all intents and purposes, the answer would be yes. On the other hand, no instrument of measurement is perfect, so there is not an infinitesimally small portion of the space that would be consistent with stationarity within the errors. I fear, however, that we're now delving too much into technicalities.
When you measure the elctron and the wave function collapses the electron randomly picks a place to go, and then a different place next time; So does that mean it is moving in between checks?

Quantum mechanics includes not only a means of generating the wave function for a particular situation, but also evolving it with time. Whenever we "measure" the position of an electron, we "collapse" its wave function. If we neglect the instrumental errors, this means that we force it into a particular position state and generate a single answer to the question, "Where is the electron?". Remember, however, that the single answer that we get will not be exactly predictable; that is, it could have been a range of other answers.

If, after generating this answer, we stop measuring (and interfering with) the electron's position, the wave function will be able to evolve -- spread out again to create a superposition answers. There may or may not be a final stationary state to this evolution, but the point is that it will not spread out instantaneously. Roughly speaking, the sooner we make our second measurement, the less likely we are to get an answer very discrepant from our original one.

I hope this is helpful.
 
  • #19
Wait a minute. I was under the impression that if you measured an operator, after the wavefunction collapses to the eigenvalue measured, it then evolves according to the Schrodinger equation. So, if you were measuring the position, you'd obtain a certain value, and the wavefunction would collapse to a delta function centered at that point. Then, it would evolve as if the delta function was its intial condition. Is this not correct?
 
  • #20
Manchot said:
Wait a minute. I was under the impression that if you measured an operator, after the wavefunction collapses to the eigenvalue measured, it then evolves according to the Schrodinger equation.

Well, you don't really measure the operator. It's more like the act of measurement can be represented by the application of the operator to the eigenstate. The eigenvalue would be the value of the observable that you measure in a particular eigenstate.


So, if you were measuring the position, you'd obtain a certain value, and the wavefunction would collapse to a delta function centered at that point. Then, it would evolve as if the delta function was its intial condition. Is this not correct?

It wouldn't be an exact delta function because no measurement is perfect, but otherwise that seems correct. Did some part of my post seem to contradict this?
 
  • #21
the electron is moving - the probability wave is a standing or stationary wave, hence the electron moves but the wave doesnt. The circumference of the orbit must be a multiple of the de Broglie wavelength of the electron in order to set up a standing wave. This is also why electrons exsist in discreet energy levels.
 
  • #22
Uh, perhaps someone can correct me if I'm wrong here, but the electrons don't orbit. Besides for the case where the electrons orbital angular momentum is 0, the wave function is not spherically symmetrical. And the radial probability of the states with the same principal number is a function of [tex](r^2)e^\frac{-2r}{a}[/tex], so it does not have a definite circumfrence either.
edit:typo
 
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  • #23
Kazza_765 said:
Uh, perhaps someone can correct me if I'm wrong here, but the electrons don't orbit. Besides for the case where the electrons orbital angular momentum is 0, the wave function is not spherically symmetrical. And the radial probability of the states with the same principal number is a function of [tex](r^2)e^\frac{-2r}{a}[/tex], so it does not have a definite circumfrence either.
edit:typo

Er... the s orbital has angular momentum quantum number of l=0 AND it is spherically symmetric.

However, your first part is accurate. Electrons do NOT "orbit" around the nucleus the way planets orbit around a central body. This question comes up over and over and over again, and I'm sure if one does a search on this forum, one would see a ton of listing on this already. It is why many of us here seldom participate whenever threads like this reappear.

Zz.
 
  • #24
As far as I know, electrons are moving because they have mass and carry energy. Another reason which came to my mind was the bonding. Bonds cannot be made until the electron do not change its position.

Electrons are moving but not in orbits AROUND the atom. They are in motion within the atom. In Metals, electrons are moving from one atom to another.
 
  • #25
Rashid said:
As far as I know, electrons are moving because they have mass and carry energy. Another reason which came to my mind was the bonding. Bonds cannot be made until the electron do not change its position.
Electrons are moving but not in orbits AROUND the atom. They are in motion within the atom. In Metals, electrons are moving from one atom to another.

Actually, if you look carefully at the description for chemical bonds, it REQUIRES that the electron is spread out in space SIMULTANEOUSLY. Or else, the concept of overlapping of the wavefunction is meaningless, and you'll never get the phase that defines bonding-antibonding states.

So when you have that, how can you say what exactly is "moving"?

Electrons in metals, if we apply the simplest case, are described by a superposition of plane waves. The easiest would be the Bloch wave function. Again, look at that description, and you'll notice that the conduction electrons are (i) non-localized (ii) are spread out ALL over the metal simultaneously (i.e. the position operator does not give a unique, specific value). So again, saying that the electron is "moving" is misleading, even though it is a good "conceptual" argument within the Drude model.

It is only when we have electrons emitted into vacuum can we apply the classical description of describing them as classical particles. Even then, we still need to be careful to know when such a description is valid.

Zz.
 
  • #26
If an electron has momentum in an atomic orbital then surely it is in motion?
And if you know the mass and the momentum
of the electron then you can surely calculate its velocity?
 
  • #27
Bob Eldritch said:
If an electron has momentum in an atomic orbital then surely it is in motion?
And if you know the mass and the momentum
of the electron then you can surely calculate its velocity?

The same thing with "spin" as not being the same as the classical spin, "angular momentum" should also not be confused with the classical analogue. It isn't the same. Why?

(i) how do you describe classically the s orbital with angular momentum quantum number being zero?

(ii) how do you describe the PHASE of the orbital that is so crucial in the formation of bonds in chemistry? We have zero classical analogue for this.

Zz.
 
  • #28
ZapperZ said:
The same thing with "spin" as not being the same as the classical spin, "angular momentum" should also not be confused with the classical analogue. It isn't the same. Why?
(i) how do you describe classically the s orbital with angular momentum quantum number being zero?
(ii) how do you describe the PHASE of the orbital that is so crucial in the formation of bonds in chemistry? We have zero classical analogue for this.
Zz.

But then I'm talking about the the motion of the electron around the the nucleus, not the electron's spin angular momentum.
 
  • #29
Bob Eldritch said:
But then I'm talking about the the motion of the electron around the the nucleus, not the electron's spin angular momentum.

And I was talking about the "orbital angular momentum", and not "spin", or else talking about the s orbital is meaningless. There's no "s orbital" for spin.

Zz.
 
  • #30
I was thinking that If Electrons Don't move then how would you explain electricity? Would the whole wavefunction move?
 
  • #31
simon009988 said:
I was thinking that If Electrons Don't move then how would you explain electricity? Would the whole wavefunction move?

You then have shifted gear. The ORIGINAL question was on electrons bound within an atom. Now, you're asking about the conduction electrons in metals which are now described NOT as electrons bound to an atom, but rather to the whole bulk crystal with Bloch functions. This is now governed by a different description. The Bloch wavefunction now describes such a process if you want to be accurate. However, in many instances, a "free electron gas" description is often good enough. Ohm's law, for example can be derived from such a scenerio.

Do not be confused between the use of QM description in some circumstances with the use of classical description with it is called for under other circumstances. Electrons in particle accelerators are very often described via classical description. However, such usage in the atomic scenario will lead to absurd and self-contradicting results.

Zz.
 
  • #32
Electrons moving around the nucleus would make sharing of electrons by atoms impractical as well as creating a "traffic control" problem to keep them from colliding with each other.

Electrons have traditionally been considered to have a negative charge causing them to repell each other and be attracted to the positively charged nucleus. It would be more likely that these charges would result in an equilibrium condition in which the electrons held constant postions relative to each other and to the nucleus unless energy was added or substracted such as when absorbing and emitting radiation. The need to establish an equilibrium based on a fixed number of electrons would explain the need to share electrons with other atoms.

Electrons held in position by their charges could function as if they existed collectively as a wave. They would move toward and away from the nucleus(when emitting or absorbing radiation) in unison like a wave moving in and out.
 

1. What is an electron?

An electron is a subatomic particle with a negative charge that orbits the nucleus of an atom. It is one of the fundamental building blocks of matter.

2. How do electrons move around an atom?

Electrons move around the nucleus of an atom in specific energy levels or orbitals. These orbitals are like shells around the nucleus and can hold a certain number of electrons depending on the element.

3. Do electrons move in a specific pattern around an atom?

Electrons move around an atom in a probabilistic manner, meaning that their exact location cannot be predicted. However, their movement can be described by mathematical models such as the Schrödinger equation.

4. Can electrons move between energy levels?

Yes, electrons can move between energy levels by absorbing or releasing energy in the form of photons. This process is known as electron excitation or de-excitation.

5. Do all electrons in an atom move at the same speed?

No, the speed of electrons around an atom can vary depending on their energy level. Electrons in higher energy levels have a higher speed compared to those in lower energy levels.

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