|
A fixed orbit is the concept, in atomic physics, where an electron is considered to remain in a specific orbit, at a fixed distance from an atom's nucleus, for a particular energy level.〔 "Student Years, 1920 - 1927: The Old Quantum Theory", AIP.org, 2010, webpage: (AIP-5c ). 〕〔 "Introductory Chemistry - Google Books Result", Steven S. Zumdahl, Google Books, 2007, p. SL1-59, webpage: ( -->&pg=SL1-PA59&lpg=SL1-PA59 Books-Google-PkC ). 〕 The concept was promoted by quantum physicist Niels Bohr c. 1913.〔〔 "Lesson 3-2 The Development of the Atomic Model", FordhamPrep.com, February 7, 2008, webpage: ( -->lessons/lesson32.htm Fordham-Curran-32 ). 〕〔 "The Quantum Atom - BIOdotEDU", CUNY.edu, 2010, webpage: (CUNY-Pos-2 ). 〕 The idea of the fixed orbit is considered a major component of the Bohr model (or Bohr theory). ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Fixed orbit」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|