Johannes Robert Rydberg

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Johannes Robert Rydberg

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Johannes Robert Rydberg , 1854-1919, Swedish physicist. Rydberg was a professor at Lund from 1901 to 1919. He is best known for his grouping of the frequencies of certain lines of the emission spectra of the elements into simple series characterized by a running integer and a universal "Rydberg" constant. These series helped guide the development of atomic physics. Rydberg also wrote on the structure of the periodic table of the elements.

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A Dictionary of Scientists | 1999 | © A Dictionary of Scientists 1999, originally published by Oxford University Press 1999. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

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Rydberg, Johannes

Chemistry: Foundations and Applications | 2004 | | Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Rydberg, Johannes


SWEDISH MATHEMATICIAN AND PHYSICIST
18541919

Johannes Robert Rydberg was born in Halmstad, Sweden, on November 8, 1854. His father, Sven, was a local merchant and minor shipowner who died when Rydberg was young. Rydberg attended the local gymnasium (or high school) in Halmstad and studied languages, religion and philosophy, history and geography, and natural history, along with mathematics and physics. Although a good all-around student, Rydberg chose to pursue mathematics at the university.

He entered the University of Lund in the autumn of 1873, and it is fair to say that he never left. He received his doctorate in mathematics from that institute in 1879 and was appointed a teacher of mathematics there in 1881. But in 1876 Rydberg was also appointed as a teaching assistant at Lund's physics institute. His experimental study on friction electricity led to a position as a teacher of physics in 1882.

As a physicist and mathematician, Rydberg was driven by a desire to understand the basic physical laws behind the Periodic Table. He set out to find order in the mass of spectroscopic data that was then available. Atomic spectra had been used to characterize minerals and to ascertain the chemical composition of distant stars, but the underlying order was not apparent. While various spectroscopists had noted that line spectra could be discriminated into "sharp," "principal," and "diffuse" patterns, a guiding relationship between the lines had not yet emerged.

Rydberg decided to use the wave number as a measure of frequency in his calculations. A wave number is the reciprocal of the wavelength, and, although Rydberg did not know this at the time, it is directly related to energy, unlike the more common wavelength that bears an inverse relationship. Having made this change, patterns began to emerge in the data with a particular series of lines for any atom leading to a hyperbolic relationship . Indeed, the same relationship was observed for all the different spectroscopic series and for different elements.

Rydberg devised the formula

n = n 0 N 0/(m + m )2

and was testing it against the data when the Swiss mathematician and physicist Johann Balmer published his result for hydrogen atoms, wavelength = hm 2/(m 2 4). Rydberg quickly realized that this was just a special case of his formula with m = 0 and N 0 = 4n 0 and that N 0 must be a universal constant. Using this information, Rydberg was able to show that his equation was more general and published it in 1890, well before the spectroscopic series discovered by Balmer, the American Theodore Lyman, or the German Friedrich Paschen provided experimental confirmation.

The formula is now written as

1/λ = RH(1/n12 1/n22)

where both values of n are integers, but n 2 n 1. The term N 0 has been replaced by R H, the so-called Rydberg constant. It is a fundamental constant of nature and a measure of the strength of the nuclear -electron interaction in atoms.

see also Balmer, Johann Jakob; Spectroscopy.

Todd W. Whitcombe

Bibliography

Bohr, Niels (1954). "Rydberg's Discovery of the Spectral Laws." Proceedings of the Rydberg Centennial Conference on Atomic Spectroscopy, Acta Universitatis lundensis 50: 1521.

Pauli, Wolfgang (1954). "Rydberg and the Periodic System of the Elements." Proceedings of the Rydberg Centennial Conference on Atomic Spectroscopy, Acta Universitatis lundensis 50: 2226.

Internet Resources

O'Connor, J. J., and Robertson, E. F. "Johannes Robert Rydberg." Available from <http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/,history/Mathematicians/Rydberg.html>.

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Whitcombe, Todd W.. "Rydberg, Johannes." Chemistry: Foundations and Applications. The Gale Group, Inc. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 26 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Whitcombe, Todd W.. "Rydberg, Johannes." Chemistry: Foundations and Applications. The Gale Group, Inc. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (December 26, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3400900454.html

Whitcombe, Todd W.. "Rydberg, Johannes." Chemistry: Foundations and Applications. The Gale Group, Inc. 2004. Retrieved December 26, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3400900454.html

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