Chemistry, asked by SADDAM9220, 11 months ago

An electron is found in an orbital with 1 radial node and 2 angular nodes

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Answered by ITZAARAV
1

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It has no radial or angular nodes: the 1s orbital is simply a sphere of electron density. A node is a point where the electron positional probability is zero. As with all orbitals the number of radial nodes increases with the principle quantum number (i.e. the 2s orbital has one radial node, the 3s has two etc.).

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Answered by MsAainaDz
0

Answer:

It has no radial or angular nodes: the 1s orbital is simply a sphere of electron density. A node is a point where the electron positional probability is zero. As with all orbitals the number of radial nodes increases with the principle quantum number (i.e. the 2s orbital has one radial node, the 3s has two etc.).

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