Light consists of electromagnetic radiation of different wavelengths. Therefore, when the elements or their compounds are heated either on a flame or by an electric arc they emit energy in the form of light. Analysis of this light, with the help of a
spectroscope gives us a discontinuous spectrum. A spectroscope or a spectrometer is an instrument which is used for separating the components of light, which have different wavelengths. The spectrum appears in a series of lines called the line spectrum. This line spectrum is called an atomic spectrum when it originates from an atom in elemental form. Each element has a different atomic spectrum. The production of line spectra by the atoms of an element indicate that an atom can radiate only a certain amount of energy. This leads to the conclusion that bound electrons cannot have just any amount of energy but only a certain, specific amount of energy. The emission spectrum can be used to determine the composition of a material, since it is different for each
element of the
periodic table. One example is
astronomical spectroscopy: identifying the composition of
stars by analysing the received light. The emission spectrum characteristics of some elements are plainly visible to the naked eye when these elements are heated. For example, when platinum wire is dipped into a sodium nitrate solution and then inserted into a flame, the sodium atoms emit an amber yellow color. Similarly, when indium is inserted into a flame, the flame becomes blue. These definite characteristics allow elements to be identified by their atomic emission spectrum. Not all emitted lights are perceptible to the naked eye, as the spectrum also includes ultraviolet rays and infrared radiation. An emission spectrum is formed when an excited gas is viewed directly through a spectroscope.
Emission spectroscopy is a
spectroscopic technique which examines the wavelengths of photons emitted by atoms or molecules during their transition from an
excited state to a lower energy state. Each element emits a characteristic set of discrete wavelengths according to its
electronic structure, and by observing these wavelengths the elemental composition of the sample can be determined. Emission spectroscopy developed in the late 19th century and efforts in theoretical explanation of atomic emission spectra eventually led to quantum mechanics. There are many ways in which atoms can be brought to an excited state. Interaction with electromagnetic radiation is used in
fluorescence spectroscopy, protons or other heavier particles in
particle-induced X-ray emission and electrons or X-ray photons in
energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy or
X-ray fluorescence. The simplest method is to heat the sample to a high temperature, after which the excitations are produced by collisions between the sample atoms. This method is used in
flame emission spectroscopy, and it was also the method used by
Anders Jonas Ångström when he discovered the phenomenon of discrete emission lines in the 1850s. Although the emission lines are caused by a transition between quantized energy states and may at first look very sharp, they do have a finite width, i.e. they are composed of more than one wavelength of light. This
spectral line broadening has many different causes. Emission spectroscopy is often referred to as optical emission spectroscopy because of the light nature of what is being emitted. == History ==