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Atoms, Elements, and Compounds

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Chapter Thirteen: The Atom 13.1 Fundamental Particles and Forces 13.2 Electrons in the Atom Investigation 13B How were the elements created? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Atoms, Elements, and Compounds


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Atoms, Elements, and Compounds
3
Chapter Thirteen The Atom
  • 13.1 Fundamental Particles and Forces
  • 13.2 Electrons in the Atom

4
Investigation 13B
Building the Elements
  • How were the elements created?

5
13.2 Electrons in the atom
  • Each different element has its own characteristic
    pattern of colors called a spectrum.
  • The colors of clothes, paint, and everything else
    around you come from this property of elements to
    emit or absorb light of only certain colors.

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13.2 Electrons in atoms
  • Each individual color in a spectrum is called a
    spectral line because each color appears as a
    line in a spectroscope.
  • A spectroscope is a device that spreads light
    into its different colors.

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13.2 Bohr model of the atom
  • Danish physicist Neils Bohr proposed the concept
    of energy levels to explain the spectrum of
    hydrogen.
  • When an electron moves from a higher energy level
    to a lower one, the atom gives up the energy
    difference between the two levels.
  • The energy comes out as different colors of light.

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13.2 The quantum theory
  • Quantum theory says that when things get very
    small, like the size of an atom, matter and
    energy do not obey Newtons laws or other laws of
    classical physics.

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13.2 The quantum theory
  • According to quantum theory, particles the size
    of electrons are fundamentally different
  • An electron appears in a wave-like cloud and has
    no definite position.

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13.2 The quantum theory
  • The work of German physicist Werner Heisenberg
    (19011976) led to Heisenbergs uncertainty
    principle.
  • The uncertainty principle explains why a
    particles position, momentum or energy can never
    be precisely determined.
  • The uncertainty principle exists because
    measuring any variable disturbs the others in an
    unpredictable way.

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13.2 The uncertainty principle
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13.2 Electrons and energy levels
  • In the current model of the atom, we think of the
    electrons in an atom as moving around the nucleus
    in an area called an electron cloud.
  • The energy levels occur because electrons in the
    cloud are at different average distances from the
    nucleus.

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13.2 Electrons and energy levels
  • The first energy level can accept up to two
    electrons.
  • The second energy levels hold up to eight
    electrons.

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Technology Connection
Aim for the Stars Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson
  • Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson is a well-known
    scientist.
  • She has studied atoms and the particles inside
    atoms for several decades.

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Activity
Half-Life
  • Radioactivity is how we describe any process
    where the nucleus of an atom emits particles or
    energy.
  • All radioactive elements have a half-life.
  • This means that there is a certain length of time
    after which half of the radioactive element has
    decayed.
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