Chemistry, asked by RhevaFrancis, 9 months ago

An electron makes a total of 5 waves in a particular orbit with principal quantum number ‘n’ of a hydrogen like species. If the same orbits be considered in a multielectronic system, then the number of different subshells having energy between ns and nf orbitals is

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Answered by priya61522
1

Answer:

Hope this much will help u understand it and then please mark it as brainlist

Explanation:

How do the shapes of s orbitals in different energy levels of a hydrogen atom compare?

An atomic orbital can hold a maximum of two electrons, and those two electrons must have opposite spins. In a given atom, no two electrons can occupy the same atomic orbital and have the same spin.

The Pauli exclusion principle says that no two electrons can have the same set of quantum numbers; that is, no two electrons can be in the same state. This exclusion limits the number of electrons in atomic shells and subshells.

Each value of n corresponds to a shell, and each value of l corresponds to a subshell.The total number of possible orbitals in each main energy level is equal to n2. b. There are 9 orbitals in the third energy level and 25 orbitals in the fifth energy level.


RhevaFrancis: so whats the answer
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