Science, asked by podipbachhar, 5 months ago

How can an electron leap between atomic levels without passing through all the space in between ?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

The orbital shapes with more fluctuations (with more highs, lows, and bends to its shape) contain more energy. In other words, when an electron transitions to a lower atomic energy level, its wave shape changes to have less kinks in it. But the electron does not "leap" anywhere.

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Answered by BubblySnowFake
2

 Answer:

The orbital shapes with more fluctuations (with more highs, lows, and bends to its shape) contain more energy. In other words, when an electron transitions to a lower atomic energy level, its wave shape changes to have less kinks in it. But the electron does not "leap" anywhere.

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