Distribution of charge in hydrogen atom

Peter Velkov
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Suppose the hydrogen atom consists of a positive point charge (+e), located in the center of the atom, which is surrounded by a negative charge (-e), distributed in the space around it.

The space distribution of the negative charge changes according to the law p=Ce^(−2r/R), where C is a constant, r is the distance from the center of the atom, and R is Bohr's radius.

Find the value of the constant C by using the electrical neutrality of the atom.

I don't think I understand the charge distribution very well. I tried integrating the total negative charge of the sphere ( atom ), since I know it's equal to ( -e ).
 
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Please show us what you did when you integrated the distribution.

Edit: the model is really, really bad by the way, but for the sake of the problem, let us assume it is not.
 
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Sorry about the format. I don't know if the last line makes sense.
In the way I understand it the negative charge in a point should be p = Ce^(-2r/R). However I think i am wrong. Thank you in advance.
 
You cannot do it like an integral in one dimension, the distribution is three dimensional.

Peter Velkov said:
Ce(−2r/R)
I see now that you really meant e^(-2r/R) with e being the base of the natural logarithm and not multiplication by the charge e. This is normally denoted by ^ or if you do not find that symbol by writing out "exp" for "exponential function".
 
Yes, it's three dimensional, for a three dimensional point. But can't I integrate it for the whole radius, and then use the standard volume formula?
Furthermore, I know Bohr's radius is the mean of the orbit, but can it be used to derive the radius of the atom.
 
Peter Velkov said:
View attachment 90505
Sorry about the format. I don't know if the last line makes sense.
In the way I understand it the negative charge in a point should be p = Ce^(-2r/R). However I think i am wrong. Thank you in advance.
The modulus square of a wavefunction, ##p(r)## in your notation, describes the probability density of the electron and it has a dimension of inverse volume. You can therefore build the charge density ##\rho(r)## by multiplying ##p(r)## with the electron charge ##e##, so ##\rho(r) = e p(r)##. The total charge is then just the integral of this quantity over all space, not just until certain radius like you did there.
 
Did anyone get an answer for that? P L E A S E
 
Lucas Silva said:
Did anyone get an answer for that? P L E A S E
We don't give out answers to schoolwork questions on the PF.

IF you want to discuss a similar schoolwork problem you have, please start a new thread and fill out the Homework Help Template you are provided, showing your work. Thank you.
 
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