Assertion (A) : Radius of H+ is 1.5 × 10–3 pm.
Reason (R) : H+ cannot exist independently.
both assertion and reason are correct, but reason is not a correct explanation of assertion
For hydrogen-like species, which of the following graphs provides the most appropriate representation of \( E \) vs \( Z \) plot for a constant \( n \)?
[E : Energy of the stationary state, Z : atomic number, n = principal quantum number]
Consider the following data:
- Heat of formation of \( CO_2(g) \) = -393.5 kJ mol\(^{-1}\)
- Heat of formation of \( H_2O(l) \) = -286.0 kJ mol\(^{-1}\)
- Heat of combustion of benzene = -3267.0 kJ mol\(^{-1}\)
The heat of formation of benzene is ……… kJ mol\(^{-1}\) (Nearest integer).
Which of the following is/are correct with respect to the energy of atomic orbitals of a hydrogen atom?
(A) \( 1s<2s<2p<3d<4s \)
(B) \( 1s<2s = 2p<3s = 3p \)
(C) \( 1s<2s<2p<3s<3p \)
(D) \( 1s<2s<4s<3d \)
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
An ideal gas undergoes a cyclic transformation starting from point A and coming back to the same point by tracing the path A→B→C→D→A as shown in the three cases below.
Choose the correct option regarding \(\Delta U\):
A substance 'X' (1.5 g) dissolved in 150 g of a solvent 'Y' (molar mass = 300 g mol$^{-1}$) led to an elevation of the boiling point by 0.5 K. The relative lowering in the vapour pressure of the solvent 'Y' is $____________ \(\times 10^{-2}\). (nearest integer)
[Given : $K_{b}$ of the solvent = 5.0 K kg mol$^{-1}$]
Assume the solution to be dilute and no association or dissociation of X takes place in solution.
Inductance of a coil with \(10^4\) turns is \(10\,\text{mH}\) and it is connected to a DC source of \(10\,\text{V}\) with internal resistance \(10\,\Omega\). The energy density in the inductor when the current reaches \( \left(\frac{1}{e}\right) \) of its maximum value is \[ \alpha \pi \times \frac{1}{e^2}\ \text{J m}^{-3}. \] The value of \( \alpha \) is _________.
\[ (\mu_0 = 4\pi \times 10^{-7}\ \text{TmA}^{-1}) \]
Dihydrogen is the homonuclear diatomic molecule built from two hydrogen atoms. This molecule characterizes a covalent bond between two hydrogen atoms, satisfying each of their required pair configurations.
The dihydrogen molecule characterizes a single covalent bond between the two hydrogen atoms that comprise it. This molecule has a linear shape and is nonionic in nature. Each hydrogen atom comes up with one electron towards the covalent bond.