In a hydrogen atom, the electron and proton are bound at a distance of about 0.53 Å:

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asked Jan 3, 2018 in Physics by sforrest072 (157,439 points) 61 410 943

In a hydrogen atom, the electron and proton are bound at a distance of about 0.53 Å:

 (a) Estimate the potential energy of the system in eV, taking the zero of the potential energy at infinite separation of the electron from proton.

 (b) What is the minimum work required to free the electron, given that its kinetic energy in the orbit is half the magnitude of potential energy obtained in (a)? 

(c) What are the answers to (a) and (b) above if the zero of potential energy is taken at 1.06 Å separation?

1 Answer

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answered Jan 3, 2018 by mdsamim (213,225 points) 5 10 15
edited Mar 4, 2018 by Vikash Kumar
 
Best answer

The distance between electron-proton of a hydrogen atom, d=0.53Å 

Charge on an electron, q1 = −1.6 ×10−19 C Charge on a proton, q2 = +1.6 ×10−19 C (a) Potential at infinity is zero. Potential energy of the system, p-e = Potential energy at infinity − Potential energy at distance, d

∴ Potential energy of the system = Potential energy at d1 − Potential energy at d

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