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base
exited
exited
energy
base
Bright huge orange flame
light grren with a little blue, light blue through cobalt glass
bright redish pink, pink through
cobalt glass
brighter light orange
light pink, tiny bit white, white through cobalt glass
orangeish red, pink through cobalt glass
600
Calcium/Orange
Copper/ green
6 x 10^-7
490
4
...
5 x 10^-7
Sodium/ light orange
600
6 x 10^-7
Potassium/ pink
650
6
...
25 x 10^-7
3
...
056 x 10^-19
3
...
313 x 10^-19
3
...
180 x 10^-19
600 nm
1m
————- x ————— — = 6 x 10^-7M
1
1x 10^9 nm
C= λ V ——> 3
...
626 x 10^-34) /5 x 10^14 m/s
E = 3
...
If it had been the chloride causing
the color change, all of the compounds would have burned the same color
...
Sodium is most likely the metal ion that predominates in the glass rod, because yellow light has
a wave length of 577 nm and the sodium in our experiment gave off a light with a wave length
of 600 nm
...
I would guess that rubidium gave off a bright red light in the flame because it is
named of the ruby gem which is bright red