Chemistry, asked by SpaceWalkers04, 9 months ago

What is the limiting line in the Balmer series?

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Answered by ushaurya063
1

Answer:

The Balmer series for the hydrogen-like atom is for transitions that end at n=2 . The limiting line is basically when you consider shoving a new electron into the atom and forcing it to land in the destination energy level nf for the particular series... =Z2⋅5.4497×10−19J

Answered by Aarthi23
0

Answer:

Hey Buddy here is your answer

The Balmer series for the hydrogen-like atom is for transitions that end at n=2 . The limiting line is basically when you consider shoving a new electron into the atom and forcing it to land in the destination energy level nf for the particular series... =Z2⋅5.4497×10−19J .

The Balmer series is the portion of the emission spectrum of hydrogen that represents electron transitions from energy levels n > 2 to n = 2. These are four lines in the visible spectrum. They are also known as the Balmer lines. The four visible Balmer lines of hydrogen appear at 410 nm, 434 nm, 486 nm and 656 nm

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