Chapter 10: Modern Physics – Quantum Mechanics & Atomic Structure (Set-3)

Bohr’s quantization condition for angular momentum is

A L=nhL = nhL=nh
B L=nh/2L = nh/2L=nh/2
C L=nℏL = n\hbarL=nℏ
D L=ℏ/nL = \hbar/nL=ℏ/n

Bohr model fails for multi-electron atoms because

A It ignores nuclear charge
B It ignores electron–electron interactions
C It assumes elliptical orbits
D It assumes electrons are massless

The radius of the nth Bohr orbit is proportional to

A n
B
C 1/n
D

Energy levels of hydrogen vary as

A En∝nE_n \propto nEn​∝n
B En∝1/n2E_n \propto 1/n^2En​∝1/n2
C En∝n2E_n \propto n^2En​∝n2
D En∝n3E_n \propto n^3En​∝n3

A Rydberg atom refers to

A Hydrogen in ground state
B Highly excited atom with electron in high n
C Ionized atom
D Atom losing nucleus

In hydrogen, degeneracy of levels with same n is lifted by

A Magnetic field (Zeeman effect)
B Fine structure
C Electric field (Stark effect)
D All of the above

The radial probability density of hydrogen is maximum at

A r = 0
B Bohr radius a₀ for ground state
C Infinity
D Negative r

The classical electron radius is obtained by

A Equating rest energy with electrostatic energy
B Coulomb’s law
C Schrödinger equation
D Bohr quantization

The commutator [Lx,Ly][L_x, L_y][Lx​,Ly​] equals

A 0
B iℏLzi\hbar L_ziℏLz​
C −iℏLz-i\hbar L_z−iℏLz​
D ℏ\hbarℏ

The commutator [L2,Lz][L^2, L_z][L2,Lz​] equals

A 0
B iℏLxi\hbar L_xiℏLx​
C iℏLyi\hbar L_yiℏLy​
D ℏ2\hbar^2ℏ2

A spherical harmonic YlmY_{lm}Ylm​ is eigenfunction of

A Lz^\hat{L_z}Lz​^​ only
B L^2\hat{L}^2L^2 and Lz^\hat{L_z}Lz​^​
C Schrödinger time equation
D Momentum operator only

Parity of a hydrogen orbital depends on

A n only
B l only
C m only
D s only

Total angular momentum quantum number j can be

A j=l+sj = l + sj=l+s or j=l−sj = l − sj=l−s
B Only l + s
C Only integer values
D Random

Spin of a proton is

A 0
B 1/2
C 1
D 2

In LS coupling, total spin S is obtained by

A Multiplying all individual spins
B Vector addition of individual electron spins
C Subtracting orbital and spin
D Using relativistic correction only

In jj-coupling scheme, strongest interaction is

A Spin–orbit
B Spin–spin
C Electron–electron Coulomb
D Photon momentum

The normal Zeeman effect applies for

A Atoms with S = 0
B Atoms with S ≠ 0
C All atoms
D Only hydrogen

In anomalous Zeeman effect, splitting depends on

A L only
B S only
C L, S, and j
D Magnetic field only

Lande g-factor determines

A Frequency of photons emitted
B Energy splitting in magnetic field
C Number of electrons
D Nuclear force

Stern–Gerlach experiment required

A Uniform magnetic field
B Non-uniform magnetic field (∂B/∂z ≠ 0)
C Electric field only
D No field

A particle with spin 1 has how many spin projections?

A 1
B 2
C 3
D Infinite

Electron orbital magnetic moment is proportional to

A L
B S
C L + S
D L × S

When a photon is absorbed, selection rule for orbital angular momentum is

A Δl = 0
B Δl = ±1
C Δl = ±2
D Any value

Magnetic quantum number selection rule is

A Δm = 0 only
B Δm = ±1, 0
C Δm = ±2
D Δm arbitrary

A free electron cannot absorb a photon because

A Energy is too small
B Momentum and energy conservation cannot both be satisfied
C Electron mass changes
D Electron must be bound

Compton scattering involves

A Bound electrons only
B Free or weakly bound electrons
C Only photons of visible light
D Neutrons

The de Broglie wavelength of a 1 MeV electron is

A Extremely large
B Comparable to atomic spacing
C Very small (relativistic small λ)
D Undefined

Wave packets represent

A Energy eigenstates only
B Localized particles formed by superposition of waves
C Waves that cannot move
D Static patterns

Dispersion relation for a free particle is

A ω∝k\omega \propto kω∝k
B ω=ℏk22m\omega = \frac{\hbar k^2}{2m}ω=2mℏk2​
C ω=ck\omega = ckω=ck
D None

The group velocity of a wave packet is

A vg=dω/dkv_g = d\omega/dkvg​=dω/dk
B vg=ω/kv_g = \omega/kvg​=ω/k
C 0
D Infinite

A rigid box potential generates

A Continuous energy levels
B Discrete quantized energy levels
C No levels
D Negative-only energies

The radial part of hydrogen wavefunction contains Laguerre polynomials because

A They describe spherical waves
B They solve differential equation with Coulomb potential
C They describe standing sound waves
D They are arbitrary choice

In the hydrogen atom, quantum number l can take values

A 0 to n
B 0 to n−1
C 1 to n
D 1 to n−1

Quantum tunneling allows

A Violation of energy conservation
B Temporary access to classically forbidden region
C Stable infinite energies
D Classical escape

The zero-point energy of a particle in a box arises from

A Temperature
B Uncertainty principle
C Interaction with walls
D Photons

The LS coupling quantum numbers L and S combine to form

A j = L ± S
B j = L + S only
C j = S only
D j = 0 only

The fine-structure splitting is proportional to

A
B Z⁴
C Z
D Z¹⁰

In the Paschen–Back effect, magnetic field is

A Weak
B Very strong, breaking LS coupling
C Absent
D Reversed

Electron magnetic moment is approximately

A μ_B (Bohr magneton)
B 1 C·m
C Zero
D 137 μ_B

Spin–orbit coupling vanishes when

A l = 0
B s = 0
C m = 0
D n = 1

Hyperfine structure arises mostly due to

A Nuclear spin interaction with electrons
B Photons
C Compton effect
D Tunneling

Quantum numbers (n, l, m, s) uniquely define

A Classical orbit
B Electron spin only
C A unique electron state in atom
D No physical meaning

A photon carries

A Charge
B Spin 1
C Spin 1/2
D Mass

Degeneracy breaking in electric field is

A Zeeman effect
B Stark effect
C Lamb shift
D Darwin correction

If two electrons have same n, l, m but opposite spin, the configuration is

A Forbidden
B Allowed
C Degenerate only
D Infinite energy

The probability current density for free particle plane wave is

A Zero
B Constant
C Infinite
D Imaginary

A superposition of energy eigenstates leads to

A Stationary wave
B Time-dependent probability density
C No wave
D Constant phase

When measuring energy in QM, the outcome must be

A Any real number
B Only discrete eigenvalues (for bound systems)
C Only classical energy
D Undefined

The wavefunction collapse is

A Required for normalization
B A change to an eigenstate of measured observable
C A mathematical error
D A relativistic effect

Quantum numbers allowed for electron in n = 3 level include

A l = 0, 1, 2
B l = 0 only
C l = 1 only
D l = 0, 2 only