A hydrogen atom consists of a nucleus and an electron orbiting around it. The
electromagnetic force between the electron and the nuclear
proton leads to a set of
quantum states for the electron, each with its own energy. These states were visualized by the
Bohr model of the hydrogen atom as being distinct orbits around the nucleus. Each energy level, or electron shell, or orbit, is designated by an integer, as shown in the figure. The Bohr model was later replaced by quantum mechanics in which the electron occupies an
atomic orbital rather than an orbit, but the allowed energy levels of the hydrogen atom remained the same as in the earlier theory. Spectral emission occurs when an electron transitions, or jumps, from a higher energy state to a lower energy state. To distinguish the two states, the lower energy state is commonly designated as , and the higher energy state is designated as . The energy of an emitted
photon corresponds to the energy difference between the two states. Because the energy of each state is fixed, the energy difference between them is fixed, and the transition will always produce a photon with the same energy. The spectral lines are grouped into series according to . Lines are named sequentially starting from the longest wavelength/lowest frequency of the series, using Greek letters within each series. For example, the line is called "Lyman-alpha" (Ly-α), while the line is called "Paschen-delta" (Pa-δ). There are emission lines from hydrogen that fall outside of these series, such as the
21 cm line. These emission lines correspond to much rarer atomic events such as
hyperfine transitions. The
fine structure also results in single spectral lines appearing as two or more closely grouped thinner lines, due to relativistic corrections. In quantum mechanical theory, the discrete spectrum of atomic emission was based on the
Schrödinger equation, which is mainly devoted to the study of energy spectra of
hydrogen-like atoms, whereas the time-dependent
equivalent Heisenberg equation is convenient when studying an atom driven by an external
electromagnetic wave. In the processes of absorption or emission of photons by an atom, the
conservation laws hold for the whole
isolated system, such as an atom plus a photon. Therefore the motion of the electron in the process of photon absorption or emission is always accompanied by motion of the nucleus, and, because the mass of the nucleus is always finite, the energy spectra of hydrogen-like atoms must
depend on the nuclear mass. ==Rydberg formula==