Quantum Numbers

Why integers rule the atomic world

The Question That Changes Everything

Why can't an electron have any energy it wants? Why is energy quantized—restricted to specific values?

The answer lies in a simple physical requirement: the wave must fit.

An electron is described by a wave function. Like a guitar string fixed at both ends, this wave must satisfy boundary conditions—it must go to zero at certain points and connect smoothly to itself. Only certain wavelengths "fit." These are the allowed states.

The integers we call quantum numbers—n, l, mₗ, mₛ—are not arbitrary labels. They emerge from the mathematics of waves that must fit within boundaries. Each quantum number counts something: how many times the wave fits, how it twists, how it orients.

See It: Waves That Fit

A string fixed at both ends can only vibrate at certain frequencies. Watch:

The pattern: n = 1 has 0 nodes. n = 2 has 1 node. n = 3 has 2 nodes. In general: nodes = n - 1

Build Your Orbital

n Principal — which shell? (size & energy)
l Angular momentum — what shape? (0 to n-1)
mₗ Magnetic — which orientation? (-l to +l)
1s
Spherical, no angular nodes
0
Radial Nodes
n - l - 1
0
Angular Nodes
l

Orbital Shape

Radial Wave Function R(r)

Where the wave crosses zero → radial node. Count them: should equal n - l - 1

Why These Four Numbers?

n (principal) emerges from the radial boundary condition—the wave must decay to zero at infinite distance. Only certain energies allow this. Higher n = more radial oscillations = higher energy.

l (angular momentum) emerges from the angular boundary condition—the wave must connect smoothly as you go around the atom. The number of angular nodes equals l.

mₗ (magnetic) specifies orientation in space. For each l, there are 2l+1 ways to orient the angular momentum (−l to +l). These are degenerate unless a magnetic field breaks the symmetry.

mₛ (spin) is intrinsic to the electron itself—not from orbital motion. It can only be +½ or −½. Two electrons can share an orbital only if their spins are opposite.