Chemistry, asked by krishnapandey12, 1 year ago

what is an orbital? How is it different from Bohr's orbit?

Answers

Answered by Reyansh05
58
hey mate........




An orbital can contain two electrons with paired spins and is often associated with a specific region of an atom. The s orbital, p orbital, d orbital, and f orbital refer to orbitals that have an angular momentum quantum number ℓ = 0, 1, 2, and 3, respectively.


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Answered by Anonymous
81

HLO MATE HERE IS UR ANSWER

. ORBITAL

. The region or space around the nucleus where the probability of finding the electrons is maximum is called an "orbital ".

. Bohrś orbit has a definite boundary and fixed energy at different distances from the nucleus. They are circular in shape.

. Orbitals have no definite boundary . There are directional except S orbital . The shape of each orbital is different.

. Bohrś orbit can accommodate maximum of (2n^2) electrons in it , but orbital can accommodate only2 electrons.

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