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Concept module
Bohr Model
Use a compact hydrogen bench to connect quantized energy levels, allowed transitions, and named spectral-line series while staying clear that Bohr is a useful historical model rather than the final quantum description.
Interactive lab
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Why it behaves this way
Explanation
The Bohr model is a bounded historical hydrogen model: it gives electrons only certain allowed energy levels, so light comes from discrete transitions rather than from any arbitrary orbital drop. That makes it a strong bridge from observed line spectra to quantized atomic structure without pretending to be the final quantum description.
This module keeps one compact bench with a radius map, an energy ladder, a hydrogen line map, and one wavelength graph. The selected transition, its wavelength, its series family, its reverse excitation case, the worked examples, quick tests, and challenge checks all stay tied to that same live state.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plansFor the current transition 3 -> 2, what photon energy and wavelength belong to this Bohr jump?
3
2
1.89 eV eV
656.39 nm nm
1. Identify the live jump
2. Read the quantized gap
3. Convert the gap to a photon wavelength
Current transition
Hydrogen-line checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
If the electron can orbit the nucleus, it should be able to fall from any radius to any other and emit any color you want.
In the bounded Bohr model, only specific energy levels are allowed, so only specific transition gaps and wavelengths appear.
Modern quantum mechanics replaces the literal orbit picture, but the quantized-level idea still explains why hydrogen line spectra are discrete.
Quick test
Reasoning
Question 1 of 4
Why does the Bohr-model page show discrete hydrogen lines instead of every wavelength?
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows a compact Bohr-model hydrogen bench with a radius map on the left, an energy ladder in the middle, and a hydrogen line strip on the right. A highlighted arrow marks the active transition, and a matching wavelength marker appears on the strip and graph.
Optional overlays label the line family, the allowed wavelengths, the n squared radius scaling, and the matching reverse-excitation wavelength. The readout card summarizes the current mode, series name, active level pair, photon energy, wavelength, series limit, and radius ratio.
Graph summary
The graph plots relative line strength against wavelength across ultraviolet, visible, and infrared regions for the selected hydrogen series. Narrow peaks mark the allowed series lines, and the active transition is read from the same wavelength axis used by the strip.
Carry the hydrogen story forward
Keep this idea moving
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
de Broglie Matter Waves
Use one compact matter-wave bench to see how particle momentum sets wavelength, why heavier or faster particles get shorter wavelengths, and how whole-number loop fits form a bounded bridge toward early quantum behavior.
Atomic Spectra
Link discrete emission and absorption lines to allowed energy-level gaps with one compact ladder-and-spectrum bench that keeps transitions, wavelengths, and mode changes tied together.
Radioactivity and Half-Life
Use one compact decay bench to see why each nucleus decays unpredictably, why large samples still follow a regular half-life curve, and how to read remaining-count graphs honestly.