Hydrogen Spectral Series Explained

PhysicsYear 1310 slidesNew Zealand curriculum
Hydrogen Spectral Series Explained

Open this deck in Kuraplan

Sign in to view all 10 slides, customise, present or download.

Open in Kuraplan

Slide preview

First 10 of 10 slides

Hydrogen Spectral Series Explained
Slide 1

Hydrogen Spectral Series Explained

Understanding electron transitions and energy levels WALT: Analyse hydrogen emission spectra and identify different spectral series Year 13 Physics - NCEA Level 3

Learning Objectives & Success Criteria
Slide 2

Learning Objectives & Success Criteria

WALT: Explain how electron transitions create spectral lines Success Criteria: You can identify the five hydrogen spectral series Success Criteria: You can calculate wavelengths using the Rydberg equation Success Criteria: You can explain the relationship between energy levels and photon emission Differentiation: Visual learners - spectral diagrams, Kinesthetic learners - hands-on activities

Hydrogen Atom Structure Review
Slide 3

Hydrogen Atom Structure Review

Single proton nucleus with one electron Electron occupies discrete energy levels (n = 1, 2, 3...) Ground state: n = 1 (lowest energy) Excited states: n > 1 (higher energy) Energy levels become closer together at higher n values

Think-Pair-Share
Slide 4

Think-Pair-Share

What happens when an electron falls from a higher energy level to a lower one? Discuss with your partner for 2 minutes Be ready to share your ideas with the class

Lyman Series - UV Region
Slide 5

Lyman Series - UV Region

Electron transitions TO n = 1 (ground state) From n = 2, 3, 4, 5... → n = 1 Produces ultraviolet radiation (UV) Lyman α (n=2→1): 121.6 nm Discovered by Theodore Lyman (1906) Important in stellar spectroscopy

Balmer Series - Visible Light
Slide 6

Balmer Series - Visible Light

Electron transitions TO n = 2 From n = 3, 4, 5, 6... → n = 2 Produces visible light (400-700 nm) Hα (n=3→2): 656.3 nm (red) Hβ (n=4→2): 486.1 nm (blue-green) First series discovered (1885) - visible to naked eye

Calculate Balmer Wavelengths
Slide 7

Calculate Balmer Wavelengths

Use Rydberg equation: 1/λ = R(1/n₁² - 1/n₂²) R = 1.097 × 10⁷ m⁻¹ (Rydberg constant) Calculate λ for n=4→2 transition Work in pairs - check your answer with neighbors Extension: Calculate the energy of this photon

Infrared Series Comparison
Slide 8

Infrared Series Comparison

{"left":"Paschen Series (n→3): Near-infrared, 820-1875 nm, Discovered 1908\nBrackett Series (n→4): Mid-infrared, 1458-4050 nm, Discovered 1922\nPfund Series (n→5): Far-infrared, 2278-7400 nm, Discovered 1924","right":"All invisible to human eye\nDetected using special IR instruments\nImportant for atmospheric studies"}

Complete Hydrogen Spectrum Overview
Slide 9

Complete Hydrogen Spectrum Overview

Applications & Summary
Slide 10

Applications & Summary

Astronomy: Identifying hydrogen in stars and galaxies Medical: MRI imaging uses hydrogen nuclei Environmental: Atmospheric composition analysis Key Pattern: Higher final n → longer wavelengths All series follow the same Rydberg equation Success Check: Can you name all five series and their regions?