What is the Hydrogen Emission Spectrum for Transitions to the n = 1 Level?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the hydrogen emission spectrum, specifically transitions to the n = 1 level. The wavelengths emitted from a hydrogen gas discharge tube during these transitions are primarily in the ultraviolet range. Participants clarify that quantum numbers m and n must be whole numbers due to the quantization of electron states. The calculations provided yield specific wavelengths, confirming the ultraviolet emissions. Understanding these principles is essential for accurately determining the spectral lines associated with hydrogen transitions.
d.tran119
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Homework Statement


What wavelengths emitted from a hydrogen gas discharge tube are associated with transitions from higher levels down to the n = 1 level?
[a] infrared
visible
[c] mixture of infrared and visible
[d] ultraviolet



Homework Equations


Equations:
1/λ = Rh[1/(m^2)-1/(n^2)] Rh = 1.09 x 10^7 m^-1.



The Attempt at a Solution


Can someone explain hydrogen gas electron transition to me? This stuff is a little over my head.

I obtained various wavelengths with arbitrary quantum numbers greater than 1. I took +infinity as a bound since higher quantum numbers reaches the series limit.
1/λ*(1 m/10^ 9 nm) = (1.097e-7 m^-1)[1/(1^2)-1/(infinity)]
λ (+infinity ,1)= 91.6 nm

1/λ*(1 m/10^ 9 nm) = (1.097e-7 m^-1)[1/(1^2)-1/(4^2)]
λ (4 ,1)= 4.86 nm

The level transitions yield a photon with wavelengths corresponding to UV light.

I’m confused though because taking bounds of the 1.01 type down to 1 allows the photon to be associated with different lights. Do I have to keep m and n whole when doing this problem? With m & n being non-integral values n can be taken arbitrarily closer and closer to 1 (with n>1) pushing the wavelength to positive infinity. Non-integral values possesses a different number of points in a dimensional space corresponding to different emissions.
 
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d.tran119 said:

Homework Statement


What wavelengths emitted from a hydrogen gas discharge tube are associated with transitions from higher levels down to the n = 1 level?
[a] infrared
visible
[c] mixture of infrared and visible
[d] ultraviolet

Homework Equations


Equations:
1/λ = Rh[1/(m^2)-1/(n^2)] Rh = 1.09 x 10^7 m^-1.

The Attempt at a Solution


Can someone explain hydrogen gas electron transition to me? This stuff is a little over my head.

I obtained various wavelengths with arbitrary quantum numbers greater than 1. I took +infinity as a bound since higher quantum numbers reaches the series limit.
1/λ*(1 m/10^ 9 nm) = (1.097e-7 m^-1)[1/(1^2)-1/(infinity)]
λ (+infinity ,1)= 91.6 nm

1/λ*(1 m/10^ 9 nm) = (1.097e-7 m^-1)[1/(1^2)-1/(4^2)]
λ (4 ,1)= 4.86 nm

The level transitions yield a photon with wavelengths corresponding to UV light.

I’m confused though because taking bounds of the 1.01 type down to 1 allows the photon to be associated with different lights. Do I have to keep m and n whole when doing this problem? With m & n being non-integral values n can be taken arbitrarily closer and closer to 1 (with n>1) pushing the wavelength to positive infinity. Non-integral values possesses a different number of points in a dimensional space corresponding to different emissions.


Yes, you have to keep m and n whole numbers. That's quantization. There are only discrete states for bound electrons.
 
Okay I understand this now. Thanks a lot!
 
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