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  2. Quantum number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_number

    A quantum number beginning in n = 3,ℓ = 0, describes an electron in the s orbital of the third electron shell of an atom. In chemistry, this quantum number is very important, since it specifies the shape of an atomic orbital and strongly influences chemical bonds and bond angles. The azimuthal quantum number can also denote the number of ...

  3. Glossary of elementary quantum mechanics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_elementary...

    A common example of quantum numbers is the possible state of an electron in a central potential: (,,,), which corresponds to the eigenstate of observables (in terms of ), (magnitude of angular momentum), (angular momentum in -direction), and .

  4. Total angular momentum quantum number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_angular_momentum...

    The associated quantum number is the main total angular momentum quantum number j. It can take the following range of values, jumping only in integer steps: [ 1 ] | ℓ − s | ≤ j ≤ ℓ + s {\displaystyle \vert \ell -s\vert \leq j\leq \ell +s} where ℓ is the azimuthal quantum number (parameterizing the orbital angular momentum) and s is ...

  5. Quark model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quark_model

    For isospin I = 1 and 0 states, one can define a new multiplicative quantum number called the G-parity such that G = (−1) I+L+S. If P = (−1) J, then it follows that S = 1, thus PC = 1. States with these quantum numbers are called natural parity states; while all other quantum numbers are thus called exotic (for example, the state J PC = 0 ...

  6. Principal quantum number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principal_quantum_number

    The four quantum numbers n, ℓ, m, and s specify the complete and unique quantum state of a single electron in an atom, called its wave function or orbital. Two electrons belonging to the same atom cannot have the same values for all four quantum numbers, due to the Pauli exclusion principle .

  7. Hypercharge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercharge

    The SU(2) model has multiplets characterized by a quantum number J, which is the total angular momentum. Each multiplet consists of 2J + 1 substates with equally-spaced values of J z, forming a symmetric arrangement seen in atomic spectra and isospin. This formalizes the observation that certain strong baryon decays were not observed, leading ...

  8. Hund's rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hund's_rules

    Hund's first rule states that the lowest energy atomic state is the one that maximizes the total spin quantum number for the electrons in the open subshell. The orbitals of the subshell are each occupied singly with electrons of parallel spin before double occupation occurs.

  9. Measurement in quantum mechanics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measurement_in_quantum...

    Quantum state tomography is a process by which, given a set of data representing the results of quantum measurements, a quantum state consistent with those measurement results is computed. [50] It is named by analogy with tomography , the reconstruction of three-dimensional images from slices taken through them, as in a CT scan .