HarryWertM said:
Are there experiments besides the hunt for metallic hydrogen which challenge simple quantum theory such as the Bohr model?
I know there are experiments with Rydberg atoms which are atypical but in no way challenging to quantum theory. From pop-sci sources [Wikipedia; LLNL news] I have read the story of metallic Hydrogen experiments which is believed to involve electron paths drastically unlike the Bohr model.
HarryWertM, I don't know well about the metalic hydrogen.
But probably in the metalic hydrogen,
other hydrogen nuclei are closer to one electron.
As a result, the potential energy of one electron is lower than the original value.
According to Virial theoreum, when the potential energy is lower, the kinetic energy becomes higher, in which
de Broglie's wavelength becomes shorter.
(Probably the repulsive forces between nuclei are coped with by the external pressure. )
The Bohr radius is gotten from
only one nucleus atoms.
This is important.
In the Bohr's original thoeory ( in 1910's), they don't consider de Broglie's theory (=1923).
They only consider the quantization of the angular momentum. (The meanings of them are the same.)
But if you try to consider more than one nuclei acting on the electron, you can NOT calculate the de Broglie's wave
without computers.
(Analytic calculation in Bohr model is possible only in one-nucleus atom.)
Is it right ?