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Bohr radius

Bohr radius is the radius of the orbit of an electron around the nucleus of a hydrogen atom.

In the Bohr model of the structure of an atom, put forward by Niels Bohr in 1913, electrons orbit a central nucleus. The model says that the electrons orbit only at certain distances from the nucleus, depending on their energy. In the simplest atom, that of hydrogen, a single electron orbits, and the smallest possible orbit for the electron, that with the lowest energy, is the one at a distance from the nucleus called the Bohr radius.

Bohr radius has a value of 5.291772108(18)×10-11 (according to 2002 CODATA), i.e., approximately 53 pm or 0.53 angstroms. This value can be computed in terms of other physical constants:

Bohr radius equation

where:

epsilon 0is the permittivity of vacuum
h with a baris Dirac's constant or the "reduced Planck's constant"
meis the electron rest mass
eis the elementary charge
cis the speed of light
alphais the fine structure constant

Bohr radius is often used as a unit in atomic physics.

Note that the definition of Bohr radius does not include the effect of reduced mass, and so it is not precisely equal to the orbital radius of the electron in a hydrogen atom in the more physical model where reduced mass is included. This is done for convenience: Bohr radius as defined above appears in equations relating to atoms other than hydrogen, where the reduced mass correction is different. If the definition of Bohr radius included the reduced mass of hydrogen, it would be necessary to include a more complex adjustment in equations relating to other atoms.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohr_radius

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