Why Six Lines in the Emission Spectrum?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the emission spectrum of hydrogen, specifically why six lines are observed when electrons transition from the third excited state to the ground state. Participants clarify that transitions can occur not only from the excited state to the ground state but also between excited states, leading to multiple visible lines. The confusion arises from the assumption that only three transitions should be visible, but the final answer confirms six due to additional transitions. The conversation references the Lyman, Balmer, and Paschen series, which categorize these transitions based on energy levels. Understanding selection rules and the nature of these transitions is crucial for grasping the emission spectrum's complexity.
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A sample of hydrogen gas absorbed sufficient energy to make the electrons jump to the 3rd excited energy level. It is said that 6 lines can be observed in the complete emmission spectrum as the atoms relax back to ground state.

But why six though?

When I check a diagrm of the spectrum, it will have infinity of spectrums, and 1-5 will be visible, while the sixth one visible is the last line, the infinity line. However is my line of thought correct? Because it only states that the electrons jump to the 3rd electron level and the atom relaxes back to ground state, so I thought it suppose to be 3 visible lines then.

I am really confuse now !
Please help!

Thanks in advance
 
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Read about selection rules in your text.
 
From the 'third' excited state, what are the possible transitions? Note that there are two excited states, and the ground state at lower energies.
 
Thanks for the reply,

Read about selection rules in your text.

I have checked my textbook, and it rarely talked about this spectrum (1page out of 1123 pages). And this question I got it from my practice final, from which the answer said it was six.

From the 'third' excited state, what are the possible transitions? Note that there are two excited states, and the ground state at lower energies.

Yeah, i was thinking about that too, and then it should be three then, right?
But the solution in the practice final says it was six.

Many thanks for the reply guys!
 
firyace said:
Yeah, i was thinking about that too, and then it should be three then, right?
But the solution in the practice final says it was six.
There are three states below the 'third' excited state.

Denote 0 as ground state, and 1, 2, 3 as excited states. There are three possible de-excitations to ground state - so that's 3.

What are the other possibilities? Each excited state represents an energy level.
 
There are three states below the 'third' excited state.

Denote 0 as ground state, and 1, 2, 3 as excited states. There are three possible de-excitations to ground state - so that's 3.

What are the other possibilities? Each excited state represents an energy level.

So then, do you count the excited state as one and de-exitications as another?

Thanks
 
Transitions can occur between excited states - e.g. 3-2 - in addition from excited to ground.

The spectrum of hydrogen has different groups of emission/absorption lines, including Lyman (UV), Balmer (visible) and Paschen (infrared)
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/hyde.html#c4

The Lyman series represents transitions from excited states (n>1) to the ground state (n=1), the Balmer series represents transitions from excited states (n>2) to the first excited state (n=2), and the Paschen series from excited states (n>3) to 2nd excited state (n=3). n is the principal quantum number for atomic electrons.
 
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