
After absorbing energy, an electron may jump from the ground state to a higher energy excited state.
'Excitation' is an elevation in energy level above an arbitrary baseline energy state. In physics there is a specific technical definition for
energy level which is often associated with an atom being excited to an excited state.
In
quantum mechanics an 'excited state' of a system (such as an
atom,
molecule or
nucleus) is any
quantum state of the system that has a higher
energy than the
ground state (that is, more energy than the absolute minimum).
The
temperature of a group of particles is indicative of the level of excitation.
The lifetime (see
resonance) of a system in an excited state is usually short:
spontaneous or
induced emission of a quantum of energy (such as a
photon or a
phonon) usually occurs shortly after the system is promoted to the excited state, returning the system to a state with lower energy (a less excited state or the ground state).
Atomic excitation
A simple example of this concept comes by considering the
hydrogen atom.
The ground state of the hydrogen atom corresponds to having the atom's single
electron in the lowest possible
orbits (that is, the spherically symmetric "1s"
wavefunction, which has the lowest possible
quantum numbers). By giving the atom additional energy (for example, by the absorption of a
photon of an appropriate energy), the electron is able to move into an excited state (one with one or more quantum numbers greater than the minimum possible). If the photon has too much energy, the electron will cease to be
bound to the atom, and the atom will become
ionised.
Once the electron is in its excited state, we deem the hydrogen atom to be in its excited state. The atom may return to a lower excited state, or the ground state, by emitting a photon with a characteristic energy. Emission of photons from atoms in various excited states leads to an
electromagnetic spectrum showing a series of characteristic
emission lines (including, in the case of the hydrogen atom, the
Lyman series, the
Balmer series, the
Paschen series, the
Brackett series.)
Perturbed gas excitation
A collection of molecules forming a gas can be considered in an excited state if one or more molecules are elevated to kinetic energy levels such that the resulting velocity distribution departs from the equilibrium
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution. This phenomenon has been studied in the case of a
two-dimensional gas in some detail, analyzing the time taken to relax to equilibrium.
See also
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Rydberg formula
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Quantum state
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Stationary state
External links
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Picture of a hydrogen atom changing from ground state to an excited state
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NASA background information on ground and excited states