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Classically, phosphorescent substances absorb energy and then re-emit it for an extended time afterwards. Fluorescent substances... ... ; Exactly what do vibrating electrons emit? ... Vibrating electrons emit LIGHT.
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wiki.answers.com/Q/FAQ/2437-61
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If electrons are waves, then it kind of makes sense that they don't give off or absorb photons unless they change energy levels. If it stays in the same energy level, the wave isn't really orbiting or "vibrating" the way an electron does in Rutherford's model, so there's no reason for it to emit any radiation.
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www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/quantumzone/debroglie.htm...
www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/quantumzone/debroglie.html
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in this model (which is sometimes called the "Rutherford model"), an atom is made up of electrons orbiting a nucleus in the same way that planets orbit around the sun. ... Then in order to emit the wave, the electron has to give up some of its own energy. ... Exactly; the electron would have to slow down, which would decrease...
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www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/quantumzone/frequency.htm...
www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/quantumzone/frequency.html
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When energetic electrons in the glass structure vibrate against neighboring atoms, what happens to the energy of vibration? ... What happens to the energy of a vibrating electron that does not collide with neighboring atoms?
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www.physicslab.org/cpworkbook/page_81/LightProperties.a...
www.physicslab.org/cpworkbook/page_81/LightProperties.aspx
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It is not out of the question that in such a theory the entire energy of the electromagnetic field might be viewed as localized in these singularities, exactly like in the old theory of action at a distance. ... 11. electrons emit photons when changing energy levels...
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www.nobeliefs.com/light.htm
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So, the electrons must emit electromagnetic waves (light) and thereby lose energy. Then, like a satellite losing energy through atmospheric friction, they must spiral into the nucleus—in a split second! ... Think of a violin string vibrating between the constraints of two frets. The vibrating string forms standing waves...
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www.wonderquest.com/electrons-colors-hummer.htm
www.wonderquest.com/electrons-colors-hummer.htm
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One of those concerned with black body radiation was the German physicist Max Planck (1858-1947). In 1900 his experiments led him to the conclusion that the energy of vibrating electrons is emitted not smoothly but discontinuously, in discrete packets. ... they could be expressed exactly and concisely by appropriate formulae,
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duszenko.northern.edu/joyce/physics.html
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As the electrons in glass are set in vibration by incoming light, they re-emit light at the same frequency. Light at a given frequency is absorbed at ...
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panda.unm.edu/Courses/Yaw/P102/PowerPoints/Chapter%2026...
panda.unm.edu/Courses/Yaw/P102/PowerPoints/Chapter%2026.ppt
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An obvious analogy was planets orbiting the Sun. One problem with this idea was that if you force electrons to travel curving paths, they emit radiation. Electrons should emit radiation, lose energy, ... If your car has an external whip antenna, at certain speeds you can get the antenna vibrating in a curious way.
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www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/PETROLGY/WhatAtomsLookLike.HTM
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