Chemistry, asked by bhavadeesh09, 4 months ago


The number of ways in which two electrons can
be placed in the three p-orbitals (each electron
having two possible spins) such that the two
electrons satisfy Pauli's exclusion principle,
is what?

Answers

Answered by atharva420
8

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This is due to Pauli's exclusion principle. The only thing which differentiates two electrons in the same orbital is their spin. As there are only two possible spins, there can only be two electrons in an orbital. ... This is because for each orbital the value of spin quantum number is 2 (+1/2 , -1/2)...

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Answered by Anonymous
4

Answer:

This is due to Pauli's exclusion principle. The only thing which differentiates two electrons in the same orbital is their spin. As there are only two possible spins, there can only be two electrons in an orbital. ... This is because for each orbital the value of spin quantum number is 2 (+1/2 , -1/2)...

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