I am wondering how fast electrons travel inside of atomic electron orbitals. Surely there is a range of speeds? Is there a minimum speed? I am not asking about electron movement through a conductor.
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4from the way you phrase your question you give the impression you do not know much about quantum dynamics. Have a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_orbital . Can you understand the article? – anna v Jan 29 '12 at 17:18
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11@anna v: For all particles, you can calculate an expectation value for the kinetic energy. This kinetic energy corresponds to a speed. This is true even for trapped, "stationary", particles. – HelloGoodbye Mar 04 '14 at 12:39
4 Answers
The state of an electron (or electrons) in the atoms isn't an eigenstate of the velocity (or speed) operator, so the speed isn't sharply determined. However, it's very interesting to make an order-of-magnitude estimate of the speed of electrons in the Hydrogen atom (and it's similar for other atoms).
The speed $v$ satisfies $$ \frac{mv^2}2\sim \frac{e^2}{4\pi\epsilon_0 r}, \qquad mv\sim \frac{\hbar}{r} $$ The first condition is a virial theorem – the kinetic and potential energies are comparable - while the second is the uncertainty principle. The second one tells you $r\sim \hbar / mv$ which can be substituted to the first one (elimination of $r$) to get (let's ignore $1/2$) $$ mv^2 \sim \frac{e^2 \cdot mv}{4\pi\epsilon_0\hbar},\qquad v \sim \frac{e^2}{4\pi\epsilon_0\hbar c} c = \alpha c $$ so $v/c$, the speed in the units of the speed of light, is equal to the fine-structure constant $\alpha$, approximately $1/137.036$. The smallness of this speed is why the non-relativistic approximation to the Hydrogen atom is so good (although a non relativistic kinetic energy was assumed from the start): the relativistic corrections are suppressed by higher powers of the fine-structure constant!
One could discuss how the speed of inner-shell electrons and valence electrons is scaling with $Z$ etc. But the speed $v\sim \alpha c$ would still be the key factor in the formula for the speed.

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It's an order-of-magnitude estimate, so I mean any bound state - any state for which the probability is nearly 100% at all times for the electron to be less than $r<r_0$ for some large but fixed $r_0$. Mathematically, they're arbitrary linear superpositions of the bound (discrete spectrum) energy eigenstates: the estimate above works for them. – Luboš Motl Jan 31 '12 at 07:23
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I'd think that any electron being accelerated would radiate. Perhaps in a stationary state the electron is best described as a motionless cloud? – Paul J. Gans Nov 04 '12 at 02:04
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7Dear Paul, the electron in the ground state can't radiate because there isn't any state with lower energy. The existence of a lower-energy state would be needed by energy conservation (photon carries a positive energy away) but it just doesn't exist, so the probability of transition to this non-existent state is clearly zero. Your comment shows that you are trying to find a classical model - a cloud? - but it's just wrong. You must start to think quantum. – Luboš Motl Jan 20 '13 at 08:11
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4The scaling with Z is approximately a proportionality to Z for the hydrogenlike system, so essentially $v\sim Z\alpha c$. – Apr 16 '13 at 03:16
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1@LubošMotl: Can we measure this velocity experimentally? If so, does it stand against the prediction of the de Broglie-Bohm interpretation (which predicts stationary electrons for the Hydrogen atom)? – Sidd Oct 27 '15 at 02:34
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1Dear @Sidd, every Hermitian linear operator is an observable and may be measured in principle. The required apparatus may be simple or contrived but it may always be in principle constructed. The nonzero value of the velocity doesn't contradict the state's being stationary. Stationary states allow things like velocities to be nonzero as long as their statistical distributions etc. don't depend with time. De Broglie-Bohm theory emulates the right theory, quantum mechanics, to some extent but not the full extent including many bodies, spin, and the measurement event and events afterwards. – Luboš Motl Oct 27 '15 at 05:51
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@LubošMotl I thought that the uncertainty principle applies to $ \Delta v $ and $ \Delta r $ but not directly to the quantity itself. – jayjay Jan 29 '19 at 20:46
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1Dear @Jung, right but the radius of the atom is really $\Delta r$, the obstacle preventing you from setting $r=0$. And when the uncertainty principle implies that $m\cdot \Delta v \geq \hbar / \Delta r$, it again means that the average absolute value of the velocity must also be at least $\Delta v$, otherwise $v$ would be too accurate. So you're right but effectively wrong. When we want $r=0$ and $v=0$ but the uncertainty principle prevents us from setting these things, then effectively $\bar r=\Delta r$ and $\bar v=\Delta v$. Does it make sense? – Luboš Motl Jan 30 '19 at 14:47
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@LubošMotl that indeed makes a lot of sense ! So that means that as long as you have a non zero $ \Delta v $, you cannot have average $v$ that is equal to $0$. But it is possible to have $v = 0$ at any one moment of time. Is that correct? And based on the uncertainty principle, you form a relationship between $v$ and $r$ – jayjay Jan 31 '19 at 06:35
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Dear Jung, if you have a certainty that v is vanishing at any moment of time, then the uncertainty of the position has to be infinite at the same point. How did your last question differ from the previous one? – Luboš Motl Jan 31 '19 at 07:30
This is the realm of quantum mechanics and classical notions about point like electrons travelling at certain speeds don't really apply in this domain. So there isn't an average speed or a minimum speed or even a maximum speed (except for the speed of light which is the maximum speed for any particle with mass).
The closest you can come to having any concept of speed for an electron in an orbital would be to apply the Heisenberg uncertainty relation which states that $$\Delta x \Delta p \geqslant \hbar$$ So if you plug the size of the orbital in for $\Delta x $ and solve for $ \Delta p $ you would have an estimate for the uncertainty in the momentum which you could then relate to the uncertainty in speed.

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The kinetic energy is due to what I am calculating as the momentum uncertainty. – FrankH Jan 29 '12 at 18:46
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speed of light is not the maximum speed for an electron in atom because even faster movemen would not violate causality. Particularly, you cannot distinguish a virtual electron in the atom from a real one. So there is no higher limit. – Anixx Apr 16 '14 at 22:10
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9It is nonsense to claim that for an electron in an orbital there isn't an average speed, or a minimum or a maximum speed. The squared absolute value of the wave-function in $p$-representation is a perfectly sound probability distribution for the kinetic energy. From this one can obtain all the statistical properties for the speed of the electron. – M. Wind May 06 '15 at 02:02
I think it may be helpful to fill out the answer to this question by summarizing what happens for inner electrons.
We take as starting point a nucleus with charge $Z$ with just a single electron bound to it. Note, for $Z > 1$ this would not be a neutral atom but it is a useful starting point for the calculation. In this case one finds, from non-relativistic quantum theory, that the mean value of the kinetic energy of the electron in the ground state is equal to $$ \left< {\rm KE} \right> = \frac{1}{2} m (Z \alpha)^2 c^2 $$ where $\alpha = e^2/4\pi \epsilon_0 \hbar c$ is the fine structure constant, whose numerical value is about $1/137$. So on this basis we may say that the r.m.s. speed of the electron in the ground state of such a charged atom (ion) is $$ v_{\rm r.m.s.} = Z \alpha c. $$ (You can also think of this as the r.m.s. momentum divided by the mass $m$).
Now let's consider neutral atoms. The above calculation gives a rough order-of-magnitude estimate if we replace $Z$ by $Z-\sigma_n$ where $\sigma_n$ is a screening factor which accounts for the fact that an electron in shell $n$ (i.e. having principal quantum number $n$) does not, on average, experience the whole electric field of the nucleus, but a reduced electric field owing to the presence of the negative charge of the other electrons. For the outermost shell this $\sigma_n$ will be about $Z-g/2$ where $g$ is the number of electrons in the outermost shell (equal to the group number in many cases). The idea is that all the electrons in lower shells shield the nuclear charge, and each of those in the final shell shield it about half the time for the other electrons in the same shell. All this is just a rough statement which ignores the effects of the shape of the orbitals. It leads to an order-of-magnitude estimate of the r.m.s. speed of the outermost electrons: $$ v_{\rm outer} \approx \frac{g \alpha c}{2} $$ Note, we have ignored the fact that the wavefunction itself is different for $n > 1$ compared to $n=1$, so there will be further factors relating to $n$.
Proceeding now to inner shells, one can take as $\sigma_n$ approximately the number of electrons in the shells at or lower than the one you are thinking about. For shell $n$ this number is $2 n^2$. So then we get $$ v_{\rm inner} \approx (Z - 2 n^2) \alpha c. $$
One thus finds that for uranium ($Z = 92$) the speeds for the inner-most shell are of the order of the speed of light. This makes this atom a useful test-bed for relativistic quantum theory. More widely, from caesium $(Z = 55)$ on up the inner electrons have speeds of the order of half the speed of light, and from francium $(Z=87)$ about half the electrons have speeds above a third of $c$.
Altogether, then, fast electrons are a significant feature of the atomic physics of heavy elements. (And for precision calculations one must allow for relativistic effects in every case, not just the high $Z$ atoms).

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This sounds absurdly simple, but for order of magnitude results, it matches well with online results and other results here. People tend to think that good old Newtonian dynamics are useless on the atomic scale, but they still apply if the velocity is well below light speed.
Simply take the electric force between the electron and nucleus, convert it to an acceleration by a = F/m, and then balance that acceleration with centripetal acceleration of velocity squared over r. That is, v = SQRT(rF/m).
I know, you might say that doesn't work, an electron is not like a satellite at a point location, but is rather smeared out in an electron cloud about an orbital. But remember - the definition of the orbital is a path at which each point is a balance between kinetic and potential energies. So each location on a spherical orbital has to be a point of balance between centripetal acceleration and electrostatic attraction.
where epsilon-zero is 0.00000000000885 and the charge q of an electron is 1.606e-19 coulomb.

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This isn't really a Newtonian calculation. You put in a value for $r$, which has to be taken either from experiment or from a quantum-mechanical calculation. (By the way, please mark up your math using mathjax.) – Apr 15 '19 at 22:30
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I see that this conforms with the classical equation given in wikipedia Bohr Atom Model namely: $v=\frac{Z.K_e.charge^2}{massE.r}$ where $Z$ is atomic number (=1 for Hydrogen) and $K_e$ is Coulomb Constant. Thanks! – steveOw May 27 '22 at 01:26