of the
hydrogen atom, the Balmer lines result from an electron jump between the second energy level closest to the nucleus, and those levels more distant. Shown here is a photon emission. The 3→2 transition depicted here produces
H-alpha, the first line of the Balmer series. For hydrogen (
Z = 1) this transition results in a photon of
wavelength 656 nm (red). The Balmer series is characterized by the
electron transitioning from
n ≥ 3 to
n = 2, where
n refers to the
radial quantum number or
principal quantum number of the electron. The transitions are named sequentially by Greek letter:
n = 3 to
n = 2 is called H-α, 4 to 2 is H-β, 5 to 2 is H-γ, and 6 to 2 is H-δ. As the first spectral lines associated with this series are located in the visible part of the
electromagnetic spectrum, these lines are historically referred to as "H-alpha", "H-beta", "H-gamma", and so on, where H is the element hydrogen. : Although physicists were aware of atomic emissions before 1885, they lacked a tool to accurately predict where the spectral lines should appear. The Balmer equation predicts the four visible spectral lines of hydrogen with high accuracy. Balmer's equation inspired the
Rydberg equation as a generalization of it, and this in turn led physicists to find the
Lyman,
Paschen, and
Brackett series, which predicted other spectral lines of hydrogen found outside the
visible spectrum. The red
H-alpha spectral line of the Balmer series of atomic hydrogen, which is the transition from the shell
n = 3 to the shell
n = 2, is one of the conspicuous colours of the
universe. It contributes a bright red line to the spectra of
emission or ionisation nebula, like the
Orion Nebula, which are often
H II regions found in star forming regions. In true-colour pictures, these nebula have a reddish-pink colour from the combination of visible Balmer lines that hydrogen emits. Later, it was discovered that when the Balmer series lines of the hydrogen spectrum were examined at very high resolution, they were closely spaced doublets. This splitting is called
fine structure. It was also found that excited electrons from shells with
n greater than 6 could jump to the
n = 2 shell, emitting shades of ultraviolet when doing so. == Balmer's formula ==