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Pauli exclusion principle
(redirected from Pauli exclusion)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.

Pauli exclusion principle

Assertion proposed by Wolfgang Pauli that no two electrons in an atom can be in the same state or configuration at the same time. It accounts for the observed patterns of light emission from atoms. The principle has since been generalized to include the whole class of particles called fermions. The spin of such particles is always an odd whole-number multiple of ¹⁄₂. For example, electrons have spin ¹⁄₂, and can occupy two distinct states with opposite spin directions. The Pauli exclusion principle indicates, therefore, that only two electrons are allowed in each atomic energy state, leading to the successive buildup of orbitals around the nucleus. This prevents matter from collapsing to an extremely dense state.


Pauli exclusion principle [′pȯl·ē ik′sklü·zhən ‚prin·sə·pəl]


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How was knowing how to use the Pauli exclusion principal, and decipher a quantum mechanical model, going to help me teach English to eager ninth-graders?
For example, under the influence of gravitational forces, which only attract and never repel, matter will collapse despite the effects of the Pauli exclusion principle--a situation that presents a problem only for an object as massive as a star.
The Pauli exclusion principle stands at the heart of modern molecular, atomic and
 
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