Bohr's atomic model in short
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Explanation:
Bohr's atomic model
Bohr's atomic model
Bohr's atomic model+Atom had centre called Nucleus.
Bohr's atomic model+Atom had centre called Nucleus.+Electron revolve only in fixed circular orbit with fixed energy and velocity.
Bohr's atomic model+Atom had centre called Nucleus.+Electron revolve only in fixed circular orbit with fixed energy and velocity.+Quantisation energy
Bohr's atomic model+Atom had centre called Nucleus.+Electron revolve only in fixed circular orbit with fixed energy and velocity.+Quantisation energyElectron revolve in those circular orbit in which angular momentum is multiple of h/2π
Answer:
Bohr model, description of the structure of atoms, especially that of hydrogen, proposed (1913) by the Danish physicist Niels Bohr. The Bohr model of the atom, a radical departure from earlier, classical descriptions, was the first that incorporated quantum theory and was the predecessor of wholly quantum-mechanical models. The Bohr model and all of its successors describe the properties of atomic electrons in terms of a set of allowed (possible) values. Atoms absorb or emit radiation only when the electrons abruptly jump between allowed, or stationary, states. Direct experimental evidence for the existence of such discrete states was obtained (1914) by the German-born physicists James Franck and Gustav Hertz.