During the period between 1916 and 1925, much progress was being made concerning the arrangement of electrons in the
periodic table. In order to explain the
Zeeman effect in the
Bohr model of the atom,
Arnold Sommerfeld proposed that electrons would be based on three 'quantum numbers',
n,
k, and
m, that described the size of the orbit, the shape of the orbit, and the direction in which the orbit was pointing.
Irving Langmuir had explained in his 1919 paper regarding electrons in their shells, "Rydberg has pointed out that these numbers are obtained from the series N = 2(1 + 2^2 + 2^2 + 3^2 + 3^2 + 4^2). The factor two suggests a fundamental two-fold symmetry for all stable atoms." This 2n^2 configuration was adopted by
Edmund Stoner, in October 1924 in his paper 'The Distribution of Electrons Among Atomic Levels' published in the
Philosophical Magazine. The qualitative success of the Sommerfeld quantum number scheme failed to explain the Zeeman effect in weak magnetic field strengths, the
anomalous Zeeman effect. In December 1924,
Wolfgang Pauli showed that the core electron angular momentum was not related to the effect as had previously been assumed. Rather he proposed that only the outer "light" electrons determined the angular momentum and he hypothesized that this required a fourth quantum number with a two-valuedness. This fourth quantum number became the spin
magnetic quantum number.
Name The name "spin" comes from a geometrical
spinning of the electron about an axis, as proposed by
George Uhlenbeck and
Samuel Goudsmit. However, this simplistic picture was quickly realized to be physically unrealistic, because it would require the electrons to rotate faster than the speed of light. It was therefore replaced by a more abstract quantum-mechanical description.
Detection of spin When lines of the hydrogen spectrum are examined at very high resolution, they are found to be closely spaced doublets. This splitting is called fine structure, and was one of the first experimental evidences for electron spin. The direct observation of the electron's intrinsic angular momentum was achieved in the
Stern–Gerlach experiment.
Stern–Gerlach experiment The theory of spatial quantization of the spin moment of the momentum of electrons of atoms situated in the
magnetic field needed to be proved experimentally. In
1922 (two years before the theoretical description of the spin was created)
Otto Stern and
Walter Gerlach observed it in the experiment they conducted.
Silver atoms were evaporated using an electric furnace in a vacuum. Using thin slits, the atoms were guided into a flat beam and the beam sent through an in-homogeneous magnetic field before colliding with a metallic plate. The laws of classical physics predict that the collection of condensed silver atoms on the plate should form a thin solid line in the same shape as the original beam. However, the in-homogeneous magnetic field caused the beam to split in two separate directions, creating two lines on the metallic plate. The phenomenon can be explained with the spatial quantization of the spin moment of momentum. In atoms the electrons are paired such that one spins upward and one downward, neutralizing the effect of their spin on the action of the atom as a whole. But in the valence shell of silver atoms, there is a single electron whose spin remains unbalanced. The unbalanced spin creates
spin magnetic moment, making the electron act like a very small magnet. As the atoms pass through the in-homogeneous magnetic field, the
force moment in the magnetic field influences the electron's dipole until its position matches the direction of the stronger field. The atom would then be pulled toward or away from the stronger magnetic field a specific amount, depending on the value of the valence electron's spin. When the spin of the electron is the atom moves away from the stronger field, and when the spin is the atom moves toward it. Thus the beam of silver atoms is split while traveling through the in-homogeneous magnetic field, according to the spin of each atom's valence electron. In 1927, Thomas Erwin Phipps and conducted a similar experiment, using atoms of
hydrogen with similar results. Later scientists conducted experiments using other atoms that have only one electron in their valence shell: (
copper,
gold,
sodium,
potassium). Every time there were two lines formed on the metallic plate. The
atomic nucleus also may have spin, but protons and neutrons are much heavier than electrons (about 1836 times), and the magnetic dipole moment is inversely proportional to the mass. So the nuclear magnetic dipole momentum is much smaller than that of the whole atom. This small magnetic dipole was later measured by Stern,
Otto Frisch and
Immanuel Estermann.
Energy levels from the Dirac equation In 1928,
Paul Dirac developed a
relativistic wave equation, now termed the
Dirac equation, which predicted the
spin magnetic moment correctly, and at the same time treated the electron as a point-like particle. Solving the
Dirac equation for the
energy levels of an electron in the hydrogen atom, all four quantum numbers including occurred naturally and agreed well with experiment. ==Electron spin==