Bohr model
In atomic physics, the Bohr model created by Niels Bohr depicts the atom as a small, positively charged nucleus surrounded by electrons that travel in circular orbits around the nucleus — similar in structure to the solar system, but with electrostatic forces providing attraction, rather than gravity. This was an improvement on the earlier cubic model (1902), the plum-pudding model (1904), the Saturnian model (1904), and the Rutherford model (1911). Since the Bohr model is a quantum physics-based modification of the Rutherford model, many sources combine the two, referring to the Rutherford-Bohr model.
Introduced by Niels Bohr in 1913, the model's key success lay in explaining the Rydberg formula for the spectral emission lines of atomic hydrogen; while the Rydberg formula had been known experimentally, it did not gain a theoretical underpinning until the Bohr model was introduced. Not only did the Bohr model explain the reason for the structure of the Rydberg formula, but it provided a justification for its empirical results in terms of fundamental physical constants.
The Bohr model is a primitive model of the hydrogen atom. As a theory, it can be derived as a first-order approximation of the hydrogen atom using the broader and much more accurate quantum mechanics, and thus may be considered to be an obsolete scientific theory. However, because of its simplicity, and its correct results for selected systems (see below for application), the Bohr model is still commonly taught to introduce students to quantum mechanics, before moving on to the more accurate but more complex valence shell atom. A related model was originally proposed by Arthur Erich Haas in 1910, but was rejected. The quantum theory of the period between Planck's discovery of the quantum (1900) and the advent of a full-blown quantum mechanics (1925) is often referred to as the `Old quantum theory'.
History
In the early 20th century, experiments by Ernest Rutherford established that atoms consisted of a diffuse cloud of negatively charged electrons surrounding a small, dense, positively charged nucleus. Given this experimental data, it was quite natural for Rutherford to consider a planetary model for the atom, the Rutherford model of 1911, with electrons orbiting a sun-like nucleus. However, the planetary model for the atom has a difficulty. The laws of classical mechanics, specifically the Larmor formula, predict that the electron will release electromagnetic radiation as it orbits a nucleus. Because the electron would be losing energy, it would gradually spiral inwards and collapse into the nucleus. This is a disaster, because it predicts that all matter is unstable.
Also, as the electron spirals inward, the emission would gradually increase in frequency as the orbit got smaller and faster. This would produce a continuous smear, in frequency, of electromagnetic radiation. However, late 19th century experiments with electric discharges through various low-pressure gasses in evacuated glass tubes had shown that atoms will only emit light (that is, electromagnetic radiation) at certain discrete frequencies.
To overcome this difficulty, Niels Bohr proposed, in 1913, what is now called the Bohr model of the atom. He suggested that electrons could only have certain classical motions:
- The electrons travel in circular orbits that have discrete (quantized) angular momenta, and therefore quantized energies. That is, not every circular orbit is possible but only certain specific ones, at certain specific distances from the nucleus and having specific energies.
- The electrons do not continuously lose energy as they travel. They can only gain and lose energy by jumping from one allowed orbit to another, absorbing or emitting electromagnetic radiation at frequency <math>\nu</math> determined by the energy difference <math>\Delta E = E_2 - E_1</math> of the levels according to Bohr's formula
- <math>E_2 - E_1 =h\nu\,</math>
- where h is Planck's constant.
The significance of the Bohr model is that the laws of classical mechanics apply to the motion of the electron about the nucleus only in a sense restricted by quantum rules like that for angular momentum L, restricting its value to
- <math> L = n \cdot \hbar = n \cdot {h \over 2\pi} </math>
where n = 1,2,3,… and is called the principal quantum number. The lowest value of n is 1. This corresponds to a smallest possible radius of 0.0529 nm. This is known as the Bohr radius. Once an electron is in this lowest orbit, it can get no closer to the proton. Starting from the angular momentum quantum rule Bohr[1] was able to calculate the energies of the allowed orbits of the hydrogen atom and other hydrogenlike atoms and ions.
Other points are:
- Analogously to Einstein's theory of the Photoelectric effect it is assumed in Bohr's formula that on a quantum jump a discrete amount of energy is radiated. However, contrary to Einstein did Bohr stick to the classical Maxwell theory of the electromagnetic field. Quantization of the electromagnetic field was explained by the discreteness of the atomic energy levels; Bohr did not believe in the existence of photons.
- According to the Maxwell theory the frequency <math>\nu</math> of the radiation is equal to the rotation frequency <math>\nu_{rot}</math> of the electron in its orbit. This result is obtained to a good approximation from the Bohr model for jumps between energy levels <math>E_{n+1}</math> and <math>E_{n}</math> for sufficiently large values of <math>n</math> (so-called Rydberg states), the two orbits involved in emission for large values of <math>n</math> having nearly the same rotation frequency. However, in general the radiation frequencies are different from the rotation frequencies. This marks the birth of the correspondence principle, requiring quantum theory to yield agreement with the classical theory only in the limit of large quantum numbers.
- The Bohr-Kramers-Slater (BKS) theory is an attempt to extend the Bohr model so as to account for conservation of energy and momentum in quantum jumps.
Bohr's condition, that the angular momentum is an integer multiple of <math>\scriptstyle\hbar</math> was later reinterpreted by DeBroglie as a standing wave condition: the electron is described by a wave and a whole number of wavelengths must fit along the circumference of the electron's orbit:
- <math>n \lambda = 2 \pi r\,</math>
Substituting DeBroglie's wavelength reproduces Bohr's rule. Bohr justified his rule by appealing to the correspondence principle, without providing a wave interpretation.
In 1925 rather a new kind of mechanics was proposed, viz. quantum mechanics in which Bohr's model of electrons traveling in quantized orbits was extended into a more accurate model of electron motion. The new theory was proposed by Werner Heisenberg. Another form of the same theory, modern quantum mechanics, was discovered by the Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger independently and by different reasoning.
Electron energy levels
The Bohr model gives almost exact results only for a system where two charged points orbit each other at speeds much less than that of light. This not only includes one-electron systems such as the hydrogen atom, singly-ionized helium, doubly ionized lithium, but it includes positronium and Rydberg states of any atom where one electron is far away from everything else. It can be used for K-line X-ray transition calculations if other assumptions are added (see Moseley's law below). In high energy physics, it can be used to calculate the masses of heavy quark mesons.
To calculate the orbits requires two assumptions:
1. Classical mechanics
- The electron is held in a circular orbit by electrostatic attraction. The centripetal force is equal to the Coulomb force.
- <math> {m_e v^2\over r} = {k e^2 \over r^2} </math>
- where <math>m_e</math> is the mass and <math>e</math> is the charge of the electron. This determines the speed at any radius:
- <math> v = \sqrt{ k e^2 \over m_e r} </math>
- It also determines the total energy at any radius:
- <math> E= {1\over 2} m_e v^2 - {k e^2 \over r} = - { k e^2 \over 2r} </math>
- The total energy is negative and inversely proportional to <math>r</math>. This means that it takes energy to pull the orbiting electron away from the proton. For infinite values of <math>r</math>, the energy is zero, corresponding to a motionless electron infinitely far from the proton. The total energy is half the potential energy, which is true for non circular orbits too by the virial theorem. For larger nuclei, replace <math>k e^2</math> everywhere with <math>Zk e^2</math> where <math>Z</math> is the number of protons. For positronium, replace <math>m_e</math> with the reduced mass <math>m_e/2</math>.
- Restricting ourselves to the hydrogen atom it follows from the expression for <math>\scriptstyle v</math> that angular momentum <math>\scriptstyle L= m_evr</math> is equal to
- <math> L = \sqrt{ k e^2 m_e r} </math>
- Hence, for an arbitrary circular orbit we have
- <math> E = -{ (k e^2)^2m_e \over 2L^2} </math>
- The rotation frequency of the electron in its orbit is
- <math> \nu_{rot} = {v\over 2\pi r} = { (k e^2)^2m_e \over 2\pi L^3} </math>
2. Quantum rule
- Let the angular momentum <math>\scriptstyle L </math> of a circular orbit be an integer multiple of <math>\scriptstyle \hbar</math>,
- <math>L = n \frac{h}{2 \pi} = n \hbar</math>
- n takes the values 1,2,3,... and is called the principal quantum number, h is Planck's constant.
- This quantum rule gives the energy levels:
- <math> E_n = - {1 \over n^2} {(ke^2)^2 m_e \over 2 \hbar^2} = {-13.6 \mathrm{eV} \over n^2} </math>
- So an electron in the lowest energy level of hydrogen (n = 1) has 13.606 eV less energy than a motionless electron infinitely far from the nucleus. The next energy level at (n = 2) is -3.4 eV. The third (n = 3) is -1.51 eV, and so on. For larger values of n, these are also the binding energies of a highly excited atom with one electron in a large circular orbit around the rest of the atom.
- The radius of orbit number n is obtained from
- <math> L = \sqrt{k e^2 m_e r_n} = n \hbar </math>
- as
- <math> r_n = n^2 {\hbar^2 \over k e^2 m_e} </math>
- <math>r_1</math> is called the Bohr radius.
- Expressing <math>E_n</math> in terms of the rotation frequency yields another quantum rule, viz.
- <math>E_n = -{nh\nu_{rot}\over 2}</math>
- used by Bohr as an alternative to the angular momentum quantum rule.
The combination of natural constants in the energy formula is called the Rydberg energy <math>R_E</math>:
- <math> R_E = { (k e^2)^2 m_e \over 2 \hbar^2} </math>
This expression is clarified by interpreting it in combinations which form more natural units:
- <math>\, m_e c^2 </math> : the rest energy of the electron (= 511 keV)
- <math>\, {k e^2 \over \hbar c} = \alpha = {1\over 137} </math> : the fine structure constant
- <math>\, R_E = {1\over 2} (m_e c^2) \alpha^2</math>
For nuclei with Z protons, the energy levels are:
- <math> E_n = {Z^2 R_E \over n^2} </math> (Heavy Nuclei)
When Z is approximately 137 (about 1/α), the motion becomes highly relativistic. Then the <math>Z^2</math> cancels the <math>\alpha^2</math> in R, so the orbit energy begins to be comparable to rest energy. Sufficiently large nuclei, if they were stable, would reduce their charge by creating a bound electron from the vacuum, ejecting the positron to infinity. This is the theoretical phenomenon of electromagnetic charge screening which predicts a maximum nuclear charge. Emission of such positrons has been observed in the collisions of heavy ions to create temporary super-heavy nuclei.
For positronium, the formula uses the reduced mass. For any value of the radius, the electron and the positron are each moving at half the speed around their common center of mass, and each has only one fourth the kinetic energy. The total kinetic energy is half what it would be for a single electron moving around a heavy nucleus.
- <math> E_n = {R_E \over 2 n^2 } </math> (Positronium)
Rydberg formula
The Rydberg formula, which was known empirically before Bohr's formula, is now in Bohr's theory seen as describing the energies of transitions or quantum jumps between one orbital energy level, and another. Bohr's formula gives the numerical value of the already-known and measured Rydberg's constant, but now in terms of more fundamental constants of nature, including the electron's charge and Planck's constant.
When the electron moves from one energy level to another, a photon is emitted. Using the derived formula for the different 'energy' levels of hydrogen one may determine the 'wavelengths' of light that a hydrogen atom can emit.
The energy of a photon emitted by a hydrogen atom is given by the difference of two hydrogen energy levels:
- <math>E=E_i-E_f=R_E \left( \frac{1}{n_{f}^2} - \frac{1}{n_{i}^2} \right) \,</math>
where nf is the final energy level, and ni is the initial energy level.
Since the energy of a photon is
- <math>E=\frac{hc}{\lambda}, \,</math>
the wavelength of the photon given off is given by
- <math>\frac{1}{\lambda}=R \left( \frac{1}{n_{f}^2} - \frac{1}{n_{i}^2} \right). \,</math>
This is known as the Rydberg formula, and the Rydberg constant R is <math>R_E/hc</math>, or <math>R_E/2\pi</math> in natural units. This formula was known in the nineteenth century to scientists studying spectroscopy, but there was no theoretical explanation for this form or a theoretical prediction for the value of R, until Bohr. In fact, Bohr's derivation of the Rydberg constant, as well as the concomitant agreement of Bohr's formula with experimentally observed spectral lines of the Lyman (<math>n_f = 1</math>), Balmer (<math>n_f = 2</math>), and Paschen (<math>n_f = 3</math>) series, and successful theoretical prediction of other lines not yet observed, was one reason that his model was immediately accepted.
Shell model of the atom
Bohr extended the model of Hydrogen to give an approximate model for heavier atoms. This gave a physical picture which reproduced many known atomic properties for the first time.
Heavier atoms have more protons in the nucleus, and more electrons to cancel the charge. Bohr's idea was that each discrete orbit could only hold a certain number of electrons. After that orbit is full, the next level would have to be used. This gives the atom a shell structure, in which each shell corresponds to a Bohr orbit.
This model is even more approximate than the model of hydrogen, because it treats the electrons in each shell as non-interacting. But the repulsions of electrons is taken into account somewhat by the phenomenon of screening. The electrons in outer orbits do not only orbit the nucleus, but they also orbit the inner electrons, so the effective charge Z that they see is reduced by the number of the electrons in the inner orbit.
For example, the lithium atom has two electrons in the lowest 1S orbit, and these orbit at Z=2. Each one sees the nuclear charge of Z=3 minus the screening effect of the other, which crudely reduces the nuclear charge by 1 unit. This means that the innermost electrons orbit at approximately 1/4th the Bohr radius. The outermost electron in lithium orbits at roughly Z=1, since the two inner electrons reduce the nuclear charge by 2. This outer electron should be at nearly one Bohr radius from the nucleus. Because the electrons strongly repel each other, the effective charge description is very approximate, the effective charge Z doesn't usually come out to be an integer. But Moseley's law experimentally probes the innermost pair of electrons, and shows that they do see a nuclear charge of approximately Z-1, while the outermost electron in an atom or ion with only one electron in the outermost shell orbits a core with effective charge Z-k where k is the total number of electrons in the inner shells.
The shell model was able to qualitatively explain many of the mysterious properties of atoms which became codified in the late 19th century in the periodic table of the elements. One property was the size of atoms, which could be determined approximately by measuring the viscosity of gasses and density of pure crystaline solids. Atoms tend to get smaller as you move to the right in the periodic table, becoming much bigger at the next line of the table. Atoms to the right of the table tend to gain electrons, while atoms to the left tend to lose them. Every element on the last column of the table is chemically inert (noble gas).
In the shell model, this phenomenon is explained by shell-filling. Successive atoms get smaller because they are filling orbits of the same size, until the orbit is full, at which point the next atom in the table has a loosely bound outer electron, causing it to expand. The first Bohr orbit is filled when it has two electrons, and this explains why helium is inert. The second orbit allows eight electrons, and when it is full the atom is neon, again inert. The third orbital contains eight again, except that in the more correct Sommerfeld treatment (reproduced in modern quantum mechanics) there are extra "d" electrons. The third orbit may hold an extra 10 d electrons, but these positions are not filled until a few more orbitals from the next level are filled (Filling the n=3 d orbitals produces the 10 transition elements). The irregular filling pattern is an effect of interactions between electrons, which are not taken into account in either the Bohr or Sommerfeld models, and which are difficult to calculate even in the modern treatment.
Moseley's law and calculation of K-alpha X-ray emission lines
Niels Bohr said in 1962, "You see actually the Rutherford work [the nuclear atom] was not taken seriously. We cannot understand today, but it was not taken seriously at all. There was no mention of it any place. The great change came from Moseley."
In 1913 Henry Moseley found an empirical relationship between the strongest X-ray line emitted by atoms under electron bombardment (then known as the K-alpha line), and their atomic number Z. Moseley's empiric formula was found to be derivable from Rydberg and Bohr's formula (Moseley actually mentions only Ernest Rutherford and Antonius Van den Broek in terms of models). The two additional assumptions that [1] this X-ray line came from a transition between energy levels with quantum numbers 1 and 2, and [2], that the atomic number Z when used in the formula for atoms heavier than hydrogen, should be diminished by 1, to (Z-1)².
Moseley wrote to Bohr, puzzled about his results, but Bohr was not able to help. At that time, he thought that the postulated innermost "K" shell of electrons should have at least four electrons, not the two which would have neatly explained the result. So Moseley published his results without a theoretical explanation.
Later, people realized that the effect was caused by charge screening, with an inner shell containing only 2 electrons. In the experiment, one of the innermost electrons in the atom is knocked out, leaving a vacancy in the lowest Bohr orbit, which contains a single remaining electron. This vacancy is then filled by electrons in the next orbit, which has n=2. But the n=2 electrons see an effective charge of Z-1, which is the value appropriate for the charge of the nucleus, when a single electron remains in the lowest Bohr orbit to screen the nuclear charge +Z, and lower it by -1 (due to the electron's negative charge screening the nuclear positive charge). The energy gained by an electron dropping from the second shell to the first gives Moseley's law for K-alpha lines:
- <math>E= h\nu = E_i-E_f=R_E (Z-1)^2 \left( \frac{1}{1^2} - \frac{1}{2^2} \right) \,</math>
or
- <math>f = \nu = R_E/h = R_v \left( \frac{3}{4}\right) (Z-1)^2 = (2.46 \times 10^{15} \operatorname{Hz})(Z-1)^2.</math>
Here, Rv is the Rydberg constant given in terms of frequency, or RE/h = 3.28 x 1015 Hz. This latter relationship had been empirically derived by Moseley, in a simple plot of the square root of X-ray frequency against atomic number. Moseley's law not only established the objective meaning of atomic number (see Henry Moseley for detail) but, as Bohr noted, it also did more than the Rydberg derivation to establish the validity of the Rutherford/Van den Broek/Bohr nuclear model of the atom, with atomic number as nuclear charge.
The K-alpha line of Moseley's time is now known to be a pair of close lines, written as (Kα1 and Kα2) in Siegbahn notation.
Shortcomings
The Bohr model gives an incorrect value <math>\scriptstyle \mathbf{L} = \hbar </math> for the ground state orbital angular momentum. The angular momentum in the true ground state is known to be zero. Although mental pictures fail somewhat at these levels of scale, an electron in the lowest modern "orbital" with no orbital momentum, may be thought of as not to rotate "around" the nucleus at all, but merely to go tightly around it in an ellipse with zero area (this may be pictured as "back and forth", without striking or interacting with the nucleus). This is only reproduced in a more sophisticated semiclassical treatment like Sommerfeld's, but even in that case, the model fails to explain the empirically spherical nature of the orbital which represents the behavior of electrons with zero angular momentum.
In modern quantum mechanics, the electron in hydrogen is a spherical cloud of probability which grows more dense near the nucleus. The rate-constant of probability-decay in hydrogen is equal to the inverse of the Bohr radius, but since Bohr worked with circular orbits, not zero area ellipses, the fact that these two numbers exactly agree, is considered a "coincidence." (Though many such coincidenal agreements are found between the semi-classical vs. full quantum mechanial treatment of the atom; these include identical energy levels in the hydrogen atom, and the derivation of a fine structure constant, which arises from the relativistic Bohr-Sommerfield model (see below), and which happens to be equal to an entirely different concept, in full modern quantum mechanics).
The Bohr model also has difficulty with, or else fails to explain:
- Much of the spectra of larger atoms. At best, it can make predictions about the K-alpha and some L-alpha X-ray emission spectra for larger atoms, if two additional ad hoc assumptions are made (see Moseley's law above). Emission spectra for atoms with a single outer-shell electron (atoms in the lithium group) can also be approximately predicted. Also, if the empiric electron-nuclear screening factors for many atoms are known, many other spectral lines can be deduced from the information, in similar atoms of differing elements, via the Ritz-Rydberg combination principles (see Rydberg formula). All these techniques essentially make use of Bohr's Newtonian energy-potential picture of the atom.
- The relative intensities of spectral lines; although in some simple cases, Bohr's formula or modifications of it, was able to provide reasonable estimates (for example, calculations by Kramers for the Stark effect).
- The existence of fine structure and hyperfine structure in spectral lines, which are known to be due to a variety of relativistic and subtle effects, as well as complications from electron spin.
- The Zeeman effect - changes in spectral lines due to external magnetic fields; these are also due to more complicated quantum principles interacting with electron spin and orbital magnetic fields.
Refinements
Several enhancements to the Bohr model were proposed; most notably the Sommerfeld model or Bohr-Sommerfeld model, which suggested that electrons travel in elliptical orbits around a nucleus instead of the Bohr model's circular orbits. This model supplemented the quantized angular momentum condition of the Bohr model with an additional radial quantization condition, the Sommerfeld-Wilson quantization condition
- <math>
\int_0^T p_r dq_r = n h \,</math>
where p_r is the radial momentum canonically conjugate to the coordinate q which is the radial position and T is one full orbital period. The integral is the action of action-angle coordinates. This condition, suggested by the correspondence principle, is the only one possible, since the quantum numbers are adiabatic invariants.
The Bohr-Sommerfeld model was fundamentally inconsistent and led to many paradoxes. The azimuthal quantum number measured the tilt of the orbital plane relative to the x-y plane, and it could only take a few discrete values. This contradicted the obvious fact that an atom could be turned this way and that relative to the coordinates without restriction. The Sommerfeld quantization can be performed in different canonical coordinates, and sometimes gives answers which are different. The incorporation of radiation corrections was difficult, because it required finding action-angle coordinates for a combined radiation/atom system, which is difficult when the radiation is allowed to escape. The whole theory did not extend to non-integrable motions, which meant that many systems could not be treated even in principle. In the end, the model was replaced the modern quantum mechanical treatment of the hydrogen atom, which was first given by Wolfgang Pauli in 1925, using Heisenberg's matrix mechanics. The current picture of the hydrogen atom is based on the atomic orbitals of wave mechanics which Erwin Schrodinger developed in 1926.
However, this is not to say that the Bohr model was without its successes. Calculations based on the Bohr-Sommerfeld model were able to accurately explain a number of more complex atomic spectral effects. For example, up to first-order perturbations, the Bohr model and quantum mechanics make the same predictions for the spectral line splitting in the Stark effect. At higher-order perturbations, however, the Bohr model and quantum mechanics differ, and measurements of the Stark effect under high field strengths helped confirm the correctness of quantum mechanics over the Bohr model. The prevailing theory behind this difference lies in the shapes of the orbitals of the electrons, which vary according to the energy state of the electron.
The Bohr-Sommerfeld quantization conditions lead to questions in modern mathematics. Consistent semiclassical quantization condition requires a certain type of structure on the phase space, which places topological limitations on the types of symplectic manifolds which can be quantized. In particular, the symplectic form should be the curvature form of a connection of a Hermitian line bundle, which is called a prequantization.
See also
- Franck-Hertz experiment provided early support for the Bohr model.
- Moseley's law provided early support for the Bohr model. See also Henry Moseley
- Inert pair effect is adequately explained by means of the Bohr model.
- Lyman series
- Schrödinger equation
- Theoretical and experimental justification for the Schrödinger equation
- Balmer's Constant
- Quantum Mechanics
- 1913 in science
References
- ↑ N. Bohr, Philosophical Magazine 26, 1-25 (1913) (a link to this article is provided below)
Historical
- Niels Bohr (1913). "On the Constitution of Atoms and Molecules (Part 1 of 3)". Philosophical Magazine. 26: 1–25. External link in
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(help) - Niels Bohr (1913). "On the Constitution of Atoms and Molecules, Part II Systems Containing Only a Single Nucleus". Philosophical Magazine. 26: 476–502.
- Niels Bohr (1913). "On the Constitution of Atoms and Molecules, Part III". Philosophical Magazine. 26: 857–875.
- Niels Bohr (1914). "The spectra of helium and hydrogen". Nature. 92: 231–232.
- Niels Bohr (1921). "Atomic Structure". Nature. External link in
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(help) - A. Einstein (1917). "Zum Quantensatz von Sommerfeld und Epstein". Verhandlungen der Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft. 19: 82–92. Reprinted in The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, A. Engel translator, (1997) Princeton University Press, Princeton. 6 p.434. (Provides an elegant reformulation of the Bohr-Sommerfeld quantization conditions, as well as an important insight into the quantization of non-integrable (chaotic) dynamical systems.)
Further reading
- Linus Pauling (1985). General Chemistry, Chapter 3 (3rd ed). Dover Publications. A great explainer of Chemistry describes the Bohr model, appropriate for High School and College students.
- George Gamow (1985). Thirty years that shook Physics, Chapter 2. Dover Publications. A popularizer of physics explains the Bohr model in the context of the development of quantum mechanics, appropriate for High School and College students
- Walter J. Lehmann (1972). Atomic and Molecular Structure: the development of our concepts, chapter 18. John Wiley and Sons. Great explanations, appropriate for High School and College students
- Paul Tipler and Ralph Llewellyn (2002). Modern Physics (4th ed.). W. H. Freeman. ISBN 0-7167-4345-0.
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