Chemistry Project: Emily Krupp

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Across
  1. 2. Each of the actual or potential patterns of electron density that may be formed in an atom or molecule by one or more electrons, and that can be represented as a wave
  2. 3. An electron orbital.
  3. 5. The maximum amount or concentration of a chemical that a worker may be exposed to under OSHA regulations.
  4. 9. The distribution of electrons of an atom or molecule in atomic or molecular orbitals.
  5. 10. Pictorial descriptions of the electrons in an atom.
  6. 11. The rate at which a vibration occurs that constitutes a wave, either in a material(as in sound waves), or in an electromagnetic field (as in radio waves and light)
  7. 12. A particle representing a quantum of light or other electromagnetic radiation. A photon carries energy proportional to the radiation frequency but has zero rest mass.
Down
  1. 1. No two electrons in the same atom can have identical quantum numbers.
  2. 4. Radiation including visible light, radio waves, gamma rays, and X-rays, in which electric and magnetic fields vary simultaneously.
  3. 6. The distance between successive crests of a wave, especially points in a sound wave or electromagnetic wave.
  4. 7. Electrons orbiting one or more atoms fill the lowest available energy levels before filling higher levels.
  5. 8. Every orbital in a subshell is singly occupied with one electron before any one orbital is doubly occupied, and all electrons in singly occupied orbitals have the same spin.