Quantum redactiones paginae "Orbitalis atomica" differant

Content deleted Content added
m ~
m ~
Linea 1:
{{LLatinitas|-12}}
[[Fasciculus:Neon_orbitals.JPG|thumb|upright=1.5|Formae earum quinque primarum orbitalum atomicarum sunt: 1s, 2s, 2p<sub>''x''</sub>, 2p<sub>''y''</sub>, et 2p<sub>''z''</sub>. Hae duae [[color]]es eam phasem aut signum functionis-undae{{dubsig}} in quibusque regionibus monstrant. Hae graphae{{dubsig}} sunt earum [ψ(''x'', ''y'', ''z'')] functionum quae ob coordinata unius electroni dependent. Ut videas formam elongatam earum ψ(''x'', ''y'', ''z'')<sup>2</sup>{{math|ψ(''x'', ''y'', ''z'')<sup>2</sup>}} {{dubsig}} functionum quae densitatem directius monstrant, vide graphas{{dubsig}} d-orbitalum post hic.]]
'''Orbitalis atomica''' in [[mechanica quantica|mechanica quantica]] est [[functio|functio mathematica]] quae [[mores]] undulatos aut unius aut binorum [[electron|electronielectronorum]] aut binorum electronorum in [[atomus|atomo]] describit.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Orchin|last1=Orchin|last2=Macomber|last3=Pinhas|last4=Wilson|first1=Milton|first=Milton|first2=Roger S.|first3=Allan|first4=Ret al. Marshall|year=2005|title=Atomic Orbital Theory|url=http://media.wiley.com/product_data/excerpt/81/04716802/0471680281.pdf}}</ref> HaecQuae functio usaadhiberi sitpotest ut ea probabilitas quemquam electronum atomi investigandi in quaquam speciale regione circum [[Nucleus atomi|nucleum atomi]] calculaturcalculetur. Ea appellatioAppellatio "''orbital atomica"''  vel ei regioni physicali aut spatio ubi electron calculetur praesens referat; ita definita ab forma mathematicale particulare illius orbitalis.<ref>{{CiteDaintith book|last=Daintith|first=J2004.|year=2004|title=Oxford Dictionary of Chemistry|location=New York|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=0-19-860918-3|ISBN=0-19-860918-3}}</ref>
 
== Notae ==
Linea 7:
 
==Bibliographia==
*Daintith, J. [[2004]]. ''Oxford Dictionary of Chemistry.'' Novi Eboraci: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198609183.
*Orchin, Milton, Roger S. Macomber, Allan Pinhas, et R. Marshall Wilson. [[2005]]. ''Atomic Orbital Theory.'' [http://media.wiley.com/product_data/excerpt/81/04716802/0471680281.pdf PDF.]