Lecture-1 (Atomic Structure)
Lecture-1 (Atomic Structure)
Element
Atomic Structure
➢Subatomic particles:
Electron, Proton, Neutron
➢Diameter:
➢ Atom: 10−10 m or 0.1nm
➢ Nucleus: 10−15 m or 1fm
Rutherford Atomic Model
According to the Rutherford atomic model (proposed in1911):
1. The positively charged particles and most of the mass of an atom is concentrated in an extremely small
volume. He called this region of the atom as a nucleus.
2. Rutherford model proposed that the negatively charged electrons surround the nucleus of an atom. He also
claimed that the electrons surrounding the nucleus revolve around it in circular paths. He named these
circular paths as orbits.
3. Electrons being negatively charged and nucleus being a densely concentrated mass of positively charged
particles are held together by a strong electrostatic force of attraction.
➢ The electric and magnetic fields in an electromagnetic wave vary together. The fields are
perpendicular to each other and to the direction of propagation of the wave.
➢ Wavelength (λ) = distance between to consecutive crest (peak).
➢ Frequency (f) = number of waves that pass a fixed point in one second.
➢ Velocity, v = f λ
➢ Velocity at free space = 3x108m/s
➢ When an EM wave travels from one medium into another medium then its frequency
remains the same, but its speed and wavelength change.
Electromagnetic Radiation: Quantum nature
➢ Electromagnetic radiation can exhibit both wave or particle nature.
➢ The energy of electromagnetic waves is quantized rather than continuous.
➢ It contains neither mass nor charge but travels in packets of radiant energy
called photons, or quanta.
➢ Electromagnetic radiation carry energy as discrete quanta known as
photon, Energy of a quanta E=hf
➢ Thus energy could be gained or lost only in integral multiples of some
smallest unit of energy, a quantum.
Ionizing and non-ionizing radiation