Toleisnon
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Why are only certain colors of the emission spectrum in Hydrogen visible?
I don't think that is correct. It IS the hydrogen atom's fault ... it doesn't emit a full spectrum, which is what the OP would have found if he had done any research.hilbert2 said:The human retina can detect only a certain range of wavelengths of light, corresponding to electronic transition energies of the pigment molecules in the rod and cone cells. Some other animals may have a vision that can detect wavelengths outside that range. The main point: it's not the hydrogen atom's fault that we don't see its whole emission spectrum, you have to blame evolution for that.
Toleisnon said:Why are only certain colors of the emission spectrum in Hydrogen visible?
Sounds like you want the answer to both questions that Peter pointed out. I have answered one of them in post #4 and Hilbert answered the other in post #2. What about these answers is not clear to you?Toleisnon said:*Why hydrogen only emits certain frequencies when viewing it under a high school spectroscope instead of all of the frequencies (spectral lines)*