Licensed from Columbia University Press
See also magnetron; photoelectric cell.
Licensed from Columbia University Press
Licensed from Columbia University Press
Licensed from Columbia University Press
Licensed from Columbia University Press
Technique of spectroscopic analysis (see spectroscopy) used to identify paramagnetic substances (see paramagnetism) and investigate the nature of the bonding within molecules by identifying unpaired electrons and their interaction with their immediate surroundings. Unpaired electrons, because of their spin, behave like tiny magnets and can be lined up in an applied magnetic field; energy applied by alternating microwave radiation is absorbed when its frequency coincides with that of precession of the electron magnets in the sample. The graph or spectrum of radiation absorbed as the field changes gives information valuable in chemistry, biology, and medicine.
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Lightest electrically charged subatomic particle known. It carries a negative charge (see electric charge), the basic charge of electricity. An electron has a small mass, less than 0.1percnt the mass of an atom. Under normal circumstances, electrons move about the nucleus of an atom in orbitals that form an electron cloud bound in varying strengths to the positively charged nucleus. Electrons closer to the nucleus are held more tightly. The first subatomic particle discovered, the electron was identified in 1897 by J. J. Thomson.
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