Physics, asked by abhidacchu2468, 6 months ago

Explain briefly Bohr's quantisation rule and frequency condition? ​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

Bohr's quantization principle states that electrons revolve in a stationary orbit of which energy and momentum are fixed.

The law that the frequency of the radiation emitted or absorbed during the transition of an atomic system between two stationary states equals the difference in the energies of the states divided by Planck's constant.

Answered by tejoo
1

Answer:

This is known as the Bohr frequency condition. This condition, along with Bohr's expression for the allowed energy levels, gives a good match to the observed hydrogen atom spectrum. However, it works only for atoms with one electron.

[¦bȯr ¦frē·kwən·sē kən‚dish·ən] (atomic physics) The law that the frequency of the radiation emitted or absorbed during the transition of an atomic system between two stationary states equals the difference in the energies of the states divided by Planck's constant.

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