Lyman series Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The Lyman series is the series of transitions and resulting emission lines of the hydrogen atom as an electron goes from n ≥ 2 to n = 1 (where n is the principal quantum number referring to the energy level of the electron). The transitions are named sequentially by Greek letters: from n = 2 to n = 1 is called Lyman-alpha, 3 to 1 is Lyman-beta, 4 to 1 is Lyman-gamma, etc.The spectrum of radiation emitted by hydrogen is non-continuous. Here is an illustration of the first series of hydrogen emission lines:
Historically, explaining the nature of this spectrum was a considerable problem in physics. Nobody could predict the wavelengths of the hydrogen lines until Janne Rydberg came up with an empirical formula that solved the problem in 1888. A schoolteacher at the time, he managed to find a formula to match the known emission lines and predict those which were not yet discovered. The Rydberg formula was:
Therefore, the lines seen in the image are the wavelengths corresponding to n=2 on the left, to n= on the right (there are infinitely many spectral lines, but they become very dense as they approach to n=, so only some of the first lines and the last one appear).
Later, when Niels Bohr produced his Bohr atom theory, the reason why the spectral lines fit Rydberg's formula was explained. Bohr found that the electron bound to the hydrogen atom must have quantized energy levels described by the following formula:
The series is named after its discoverer, Theodore Lyman.
See also: Bohr model, Rydberg formula, H-alpha, Balmer series, Paschen series
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