For hydrogen atom, the orbital/s with lowest energy is/are:
- A
(A) only
- B
(B), (C), and (D) only
- C
(B) only
- D
(A) and (E) only
For hydrogen atom, the orbital/s with lowest energy is/are:
(A) only
(B), (C), and (D) only
(B) only
(A) and (E) only
Correct answer:A
Standard Method
Given: The question asks which listed orbital set has the lowest energy for the hydrogen atom.
Find: The correct option.
For a hydrogen atom, the orbital energy depends only on the principal quantum number . The energy is given by
So, the smaller the value of , the lower (more negative) the energy.
Among the orbitals mentioned in the solution:
Therefore, the orbitals with lower energy than the orbitals are the orbitals.
Hence, the set is supported by the worked solution.
The solution also contains a conflicting header stating The Correct Option is A. Based on the actual solution working and conclusion, the defensible answer is option B.
Conflict Noted from Source
Given: A discrepancy exists on the solution's.
Find: Which source element should determine the answer.
The hint says that is the lowest energy orbital for hydrogen, which is correct in general chemistry. However, is not among the visible orbital labels discussed in the detailed solution. The detailed solution then compares the listed orbitals using the hydrogenic rule that energy depends on and concludes that the orbitals are lower in energy than the orbitals.
The step-by-step conclusion explicitly states: Therefore, the correct answer is (B), (C), and (D) only.
Since the
Assuming that orbital energy in hydrogen follows the multi-electron atom order such as . That is wrong because for hydrogen the energy depends only on , not on subshell type. Compare orbitals using the principal quantum number first.
Treating the solution The Correct Option is A as automatically reliable. It conflicts with the actual worked conclusion. When such a conflict occurs, use the detailed solution working and final conclusion instead.
Thinking that the statement about being the lowest energy orbital directly identifies one of the listed answer sets. That is incomplete because the options are sets of labels, so the listed orbitals themselves must be compared.
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