Simple pictures showing orbital shapes are intended to describe the angular forms of regions in space where the electrons occupying the orbital are likely to be found. The diagrams cannot show the entire region where an electron can be found, since according to quantum mechanics there is a non-zero probability of finding the electron (almost) anywhere in space. Instead the diagrams are approximate representations of boundary or
contour surfaces where the probability density has a constant value, chosen so that there is a certain probability (for example 90%) of finding the electron within the contour. Although as the square of an
absolute value is everywhere non-negative, the sign of the
wave function is often indicated in each subregion of the orbital picture. Sometimes the function is graphed to show its phases, rather than which shows probability density but has no phase (which is lost when taking absolute value, since is a
complex number). orbital graphs tend to have less spherical, thinner lobes than graphs, but have the same number of lobes in the same places, and otherwise are recognizable. This article, to show wave function phase, shows mostly graphs. The lobes can be seen as
standing wave interference patterns between the two counter-rotating,
ring-resonant traveling wave and modes; the projection of the orbital onto the xy plane has a resonant wavelength around the circumference. Although rarely shown, the traveling wave solutions can be seen as rotating banded tori; the bands represent phase information. For each there are two standing wave solutions and . If , the orbital is vertical, counter rotating information is unknown, and the orbital is
z-axis symmetric. If there are no counter rotating modes. There are only radial modes and the shape is spherically symmetric.
Nodal planes, cones and
spheres are surfaces on which the probability density vanishes. The type of nodal surface is controlled by quantum numbers. A standing wave orbital with azimuthal quantum number has nodal cones or planes passing through the origin. For example, s orbitals () are spherically symmetric and have no nodal planes nor cones whereas the p orbitals () have a single nodal plane between the lobes and an '''' = 0 d orbital has 2 symmetrical nodal cones. The number of nodal spheres equals , consistent with the restriction on the quantum numbers. The principal quantum number controls the total number of nodal surfaces which is . Loosely speaking, in the case of standing wave orbitals, is energy, is analogous to
eccentricity and is orientation. In general, determines size and energy of the orbital for a given nucleus; as increases, the size of the orbital increases. The higher nuclear charge of heavier elements causes their orbitals to contract by comparison to lighter ones, so that the size of the atom remains very roughly constant, even as the number of electrons increases. Also in general terms, determines an orbital's shape, and its orientation. However, since some orbitals are described by equations in
complex numbers, the shape sometimes depends on also. Together, the whole set of orbitals for a given and fill space as symmetrically as possible, though with increasingly complex sets of lobes and nodes. The single s orbitals (\ell=0) are shaped like spheres. For it is roughly a
solid ball (densest at center and fades outward exponentially), but for , each single s orbital is made of spherically symmetric surfaces which are nested shells (i.e., the "wave-structure" is radial, following a sinusoidal radial component as well). See illustration of a cross-section of these nested shells, at right. The s orbitals for all numbers are the only orbitals with an anti-node (a region of high wave function density) at the center of the nucleus. All other orbitals (p, d, f, etc.) have angular momentum, and thus avoid the nucleus (having a wave node
at the nucleus). Recently, there has been an effort to experimentally image the 1s and 2p orbitals in a SrTiO3 crystal using scanning transmission electron microscopy with energy dispersive
x-ray spectroscopy. Although individual orbitals are most often shown independent of each other, the orbitals coexist around the nucleus at the same time. Also, in 1927,
Albrecht Unsöld proved that if one sums the electron density of all orbitals of a particular azimuthal quantum number of the same shell (e.g., all three 2p orbitals, or all five 3d orbitals) where each orbital is occupied by an electron or each is occupied by an electron pair, then all angular dependence disappears; that is, the resulting total density of all the atomic orbitals in that subshell (those with the same ) is spherical. This is known as
Unsöld's theorem.
Orbitals table This table shows the real hydrogen-like wave functions for all atomic orbitals up to 7s, and therefore covers the occupied orbitals in the ground state of all elements in the periodic table up to
radium. "ψ" graphs are shown with
− and
+ wave function phases shown in two different colors (arbitrarily red and blue). The orbital is the same as the orbital, but the and are formed by taking linear combinations of the and orbitals (which is why they are listed under the label). Also, the and are not the same shape as the , since they are pure
spherical harmonics. •
No elements with 6f, 7d or 7f electrons have been discovered yet. †
Elements with 7p electrons have been discovered, but their electronic configurations are only predicted – save the exceptional Lr, which fills 7p1 instead of 6d1. ‡
For the elements whose highest occupied orbital is a 6d orbital, only some electronic configurations have been confirmed. (
Mt,
Ds,
Rg and
Cn are still missing). These are the real-valued orbitals commonly used in chemistry. Only the m = 0 orbitals where are eigenstates of the orbital angular momentum operator, \hat L_z. The columns with m = \pm 1, \pm 2,\cdots are combinations of two eigenstates. See
comparison in the following picture:
Qualitative understanding of shapes The shapes of atomic orbitals can be qualitatively understood by considering the analogous case of
standing waves on a circular drum. To see the analogy, the mean vibrational displacement of each bit of drum membrane from the equilibrium point over many cycles (a measure of average drum membrane velocity and momentum at that point) must be considered relative to that point's distance from the center of the drum head. If this displacement is taken as being analogous to the probability of finding an electron at a given distance from the nucleus, then it will be seen that the many modes of the vibrating disk form patterns that trace the various shapes of atomic orbitals. The basic reason for this correspondence lies in the fact that the distribution of kinetic energy and momentum in a matter-wave is predictive of where the particle associated with the wave will be. That is, the probability of finding an electron at a given place is also a function of the electron's average momentum at that point, since high electron momentum at a given position tends to "localize" the electron in that position, via the properties of electron wave-packets (see the
Heisenberg uncertainty principle for details of the mechanism). This relationship means that certain key features can be observed in both drum membrane modes and atomic orbitals. For example, in all of the modes analogous to
s orbitals (the top row in the animated illustration below), it can be seen that the very center of the drum membrane vibrates most strongly, corresponding to the
antinode in all
s orbitals in an atom. This antinode means the electron is most likely to be at the physical position of the nucleus (which it passes straight through without scattering or striking it), since it is moving (on average) most rapidly at that point, giving it maximal momentum. A mental "planetary orbit" picture closest to the behavior of electrons in
s orbitals, all of which have no angular momentum, might perhaps be that of a
Keplerian orbit with the
orbital eccentricity of 1 but a finite major axis, not physically possible (because
particles were to collide), but can be imagined as a
limit of orbits with equal major axes but increasing eccentricity. Below, a number of drum membrane vibration modes and the respective wave functions of the hydrogen atom are shown. A correspondence can be considered where the wave functions of a vibrating drum head are for a two-coordinate system and the wave functions for a vibrating sphere are three-coordinate . File:Drum vibration mode01.gif|Drum mode u_{01} File:Drum vibration mode02.gif|Drum mode u_{02} File:Drum vibration mode03.gif|Drum mode u_{03} File:Phi 1s.gif|Wave function of 1s orbital (real part, 2D-cut, r_\mathrm{max}=2 a_0) File:Phi 2s.gif|Wave function of 2s orbital (real part, 2D-cut, r_\mathrm{max}=10 a_0) File:Phi 3s.gif|Wave function of 3s orbital (real part, 2D-cut, r_\mathrm{max}=20 a_0) None of the other sets of modes in a drum membrane have a central antinode, and in all of them the center of the drum does not move. These correspond to a node at the nucleus for all non-
s orbitals in an atom. These orbitals all have some angular momentum, and in the planetary model, they correspond to particles in orbit with eccentricity less than 1.0, so that they do not pass straight through the center of the primary body, but keep somewhat away from it. In addition, the drum modes analogous to
p and
d modes in an atom show spatial irregularity along the different radial directions from the center of the drum, whereas all of the modes analogous to
s modes are perfectly symmetrical in radial direction. The non-radial-symmetry properties of non-
s orbitals are necessary to localize a particle with angular momentum and a wave nature in an orbital where it must tend to stay away from the central attraction force, since any particle localized at the point of central attraction could have no angular momentum. For these modes, waves in the drum head tend to avoid the central point. Such features again emphasize that the shapes of atomic orbitals are a direct consequence of the wave nature of electrons. File:Drum vibration mode11.gif|Drum mode u_{11} File:Drum vibration mode12.gif|Drum mode u_{12} File:Drum vibration mode13.gif|Drum mode u_{13} File:Phi 2p.gif|Wave function of 2p orbital (real part, 2D-cut, r_\mathrm{max}=10 a_0) File:Phi 3p.gif|Wave function of 3p orbital (real part, 2D-cut, r_\mathrm{max}=20 a_0) File:Phi 4p.gif|Wave function of 4p orbital (real part, 2D-cut, r_\mathrm{max}=25 a_0) File:Drum vibration mode21.gif|Drum mode u_{21} File:Drum vibration mode22.gif|Drum mode u_{22} File:Drum vibration mode23.gif|Drum mode u_{23} == Orbital energy ==