五月天青色头像情侣网名,国产亚洲av片在线观看18女人,黑人巨茎大战俄罗斯美女,扒下她的小内裤打屁股

歡迎光臨散文網(wǎng) 會(huì)員登陸 & 注冊(cè)

1000集 TED-ED 【中英CC字幕】| 認(rèn)真刷完英語水平直接起飛!

2023-08-20 10:15 作者:愛蕾姆的理想主義者  | 我要投稿

將文檔進(jìn)行粘貼,方便查看

p1?2013-10-01 The uncertain location of electrons - George Zaidan and Charles Morto ?

You probably know that all stuff is made up of atoms and that an atom is a really, really, really, really tiny particle. Every atom has a core, which is made up of at least one positively charged particle called a proton, and in most cases, some number of neutral particles called neutrons. That core is surrounded by negatively charged particles called electrons. The identity of an atom is determined only by the number of protons in its nucleus. Hydrogen is hydrogen because it has just one proton, carbon is carbon because it has six, gold is gold because it has 79, and so on. Indulge me in a momentary tangent. How do we know about atomic structure? We can't see protons, neutrons, or electrons. So, we do a bunch of experiments and develop a model for what we think is there. Then we do some more experiments and see if they agree with the model. If they do, great. If they don't, it might be time for a new model. We've had lots of very different models for atoms since Democritus in 400 BC, and there will almost certainly be many more to come. Okay, tangent over. The cores of atoms tend to stick together, but electrons are free to move, and this is why chemists love electrons. If we could marry them, we probably would. But electrons are weird. They appear to behave either as particles, like little baseballs, or as waves, like water waves, depending on the experiment that we perform. One of the weirdest things about electrons is that we can't exactly say where they are. It's not that we don't have the equipment, it's that this uncertainty is part of our model of the electron. So, we can't pinpoint them, fine. But we can say there's a certain probability of finding an electron in a given space around the nucleus. And that means that we can ask the following question: If we drew a shape around the nucleus such that we would be 95% sure of finding a given electron within that shape, what would it look like? Here are a few of these shapes. Chemists call them orbitals, and what each one looks like depends on, among other things, how much energy it has. The more energy an orbital has, the farther most of its density is from the nucleus. By they way, why did we pick 95% and not 100%? Well, that's another quirk of our model of the electron. Past a certain distance from the nucleus, the probability of finding an electron starts to decrease more or less exponentially, which means that while it will approach zero, it'll never actually hit zero. So, in every atom, there is some small, but non-zero, probability that for a very, very short period of time, one of its electrons is at the other end of the known universe. But mostly electrons stay close to their nucleus as clouds of negative charged density that shift and move with time. How electrons from one atom interact with electrons from another determines almost everything. Atoms can give up their electrons, surrendering them to other atoms, or they can share electrons. And the dynamics of this social network are what make chemistry interesting. From plain old rocks to the beautiful complexity of life, the nature of everything we see, hear, smell, taste, touch, and even feel is determined at the atomic level.

1000集 TED-ED 【中英CC字幕】| 認(rèn)真刷完英語水平直接起飛!的評(píng)論 (共 條)

分享到微博請(qǐng)遵守國家法律
招远市| 神木县| 山东省| 丽江市| 城市| 辽中县| 安义县| 于都县| 兴业县| 米脂县| 京山县| 榆林市| 平定县| 光泽县| 泗阳县| 辽源市| 进贤县| 广南县| 古交市| 宁城县| 准格尔旗| 金山区| 屏边| 长丰县| 新巴尔虎左旗| 枣庄市| 桂平市| 昌宁县| 酒泉市| 察哈| 龙泉市| 木兰县| 彝良县| 靖边县| 三都| 吴堡县| 榕江县| 孟州市| 穆棱市| 吉首市| 同江市|