Chapter 133

Chapter 133: Helium — The First Closed Shell in Hz

Helium is the first closed shell atom — two electrons phase-locked in the 1s orbital: 1s². Quantum Genesis: the Dirac equation gives the electrons; QCD gives the nucleus (²H or ⁴He); QED phase-locking binds them; the vacuum spontaneously selects the 1s² configuration as the lowest-energy state for a helium nucleus. In Hz: the rest frequency of the ionization line is $f_{\text{rest}} = 5.95 \times 10^{15}$ Hz (first ionization energy: 24.6 eV). The second ionization energy is $f_{\text{rest}} = 1.32 \times 10^{16}$ Hz (54.4 eV). Helium is the product of stellar fusion, the second most abundant element in the universe.

0. Quantum Genesis — How Helium Emerges from the Quantum Vacuum

Who: The Architects of Helium's Quantum Foundation

Helium's quantum genesis builds on the work of Paul Dirac (Dirac equation), Werner Heisenberg (quantum mechanics of many-body systems), and Douglas Hartree and Vladimir Fock (Hartree-Fock method for multi-electron atoms).

The helium atom is a three-body system: a nucleus (⁴He, two protons and two neutrons) and two electrons. Unlike hydrogen, the Dirac equation for helium has no analytical solution because of the electron-electron interaction.

Step 1: The Electrons — Phase-Locked Modes of the Dirac Field

Each electron is a solution to the Dirac equation — a spinor phase-locked mode with mass $m_e$ and frequency:

$$ f_e = \frac{m_e c^2}{h} \approx 1.24 \times 10^{20} \text{ Hz} $$

In Hz terms, each electron is a phase-locked mode of the Dirac field. The two electrons in helium are identical phase modes, but they must obey the Pauli exclusion principle — they cannot occupy the same quantum state.

Step 2: The Nucleus — A Phase-Locked Pattern of QCD

The ⁴He nucleus is a bound state of two protons and two neutrons — a color-neutral phase-locked pattern of the QCD field. Its mass frequency is:

$$ f_{\text{He-4}} = \frac{m_{\text{He-4}} c^2}{h} \approx 6.75 \times 10^{23} \text{ Hz} $$

In Hz terms, the ⁴He nucleus is a phase-locked pattern of the SU(3) color phase field. It is the most stable light nucleus.

Step 3: QED Phase-Locking — The Two-Electron Problem

The two electrons phase-lock to the nucleus through the electromagnetic field (QED). The phase-locking potential is the Coulomb potential, but now there are three interactions:

  • Electron 1 — Nucleus
  • Electron 2 — Nucleus
  • Electron 1 — Electron 2 (repulsive)

The phase-locking strength is still the fine-structure constant $\alpha \approx 1/137$. However, the electron-electron repulsion adds a new phase-locking challenge. The total binding energy is:

$$ E_{\text{binding}} = E_{\text{nucleus}} + E_{\text{electron-nucleus}} + E_{\text{electron-electron}} $$

In Hz terms, the helium atom is a phase-locking pattern of three interacting phase modes (two electrons and one nucleus) with electron-electron repulsion phase.

Step 4: The Hartree-Fock Method — Approximating the Phase-Locking Pattern

Since the helium atom has no analytical solution, the phase-locking pattern must be approximated using numerical methods. The Hartree-Fock method is the standard approach — it treats each electron as moving in the average field of the nucleus and the other electron.

In Hz terms, the Hartree-Fock method approximates the phase-locking pattern by averaging the phase interactions between the two electron phase modes.

Step 5: The Vacuum's Phase Selection — The Closed Shell

The 1s² configuration is the lowest-energy phase-locking pattern for a helium nucleus. The two electrons occupy the 1s orbital with opposite spins (singlet state). This is the first closed shell — the completion of the 1s phase mode.

In Hz terms: the Hz field spontaneously phase-locks into the 1s² pattern because it is the lowest phase energy configuration for a helium nucleus. Helium is the first closed shell phase-locking pattern.

Helium's Quantum Genesis in Hz — Summary

Quantity Value Hz Translation
Electron Mass $m_e = 9.11 \times 10^{-31}$ kg $f_e = m_e c^2 / h \approx 1.24 \times 10^{20}$ Hz
Helium-4 Nucleus Mass $m_{\text{He-4}} = 6.64 \times 10^{-27}$ kg $f_{\text{He-4}} = m_{\text{He-4}} c^2 / h \approx 6.75 \times 10^{23}$ Hz
First Ionization Energy $24.6$ eV $f = 24.6 \text{ eV} / h \approx 5.95 \times 10^{15}$ Hz
Second Ionization Energy $54.4$ eV $f = 54.4 \text{ eV} / h \approx 1.32 \times 10^{16}$ Hz
Total Binding Energy $79.0$ eV $f = 79.0 \text{ eV} / h \approx 1.91 \times 10^{16}$ Hz
Nuclear Binding Energy (⁴He) $28.3$ MeV $f = 28.3 \text{ MeV} / h \approx 6.84 \times 10^{21}$ Hz

1. Quantum Identity — The First Closed Shell

Property Value Hz Translation
Atomic Number $Z = 2$ $f_{\text{atomic}} = Z \cdot f_e \approx 2.48 \times 10^{20}$ Hz
Electron Configuration $1s^2$ Two electrons in the 1s phase mode — the first closed shell
Period 1 The first period — the closed shell is complete
Group 18 Noble gas — complete phase-locking, no valence phase modes
Block s-block The 1s orbital is filled

In Hz: Helium is the first closed shell phase-locking pattern. Two electrons occupy the 1s phase mode. The phase-locking is complete — no valence phase modes are available.

2. Phase Energy — The Phase Frequency of the Closed Shell

Quantity Value Hz Translation
First Ionization Energy $24.6$ eV $f = 24.6 \text{ eV} / h \approx 5.95 \times 10^{15}$ Hz
Second Ionization Energy $54.4$ eV $f = 54.4 \text{ eV} / h \approx 1.32 \times 10^{16}$ Hz
Total Electron Binding Energy $79.0$ eV $f = 79.0 \text{ eV} / h \approx 1.91 \times 10^{16}$ Hz
Nuclear Binding Energy (⁴He) $28.3$ MeV $f = 28.3 \text{ MeV} / h \approx 6.84 \times 10^{21}$ Hz
Fusion Energy (4H → He) $26.7$ MeV $f_{\text{fusion}} = 26.7 \text{ MeV} / h \approx 6.45 \times 10^{21}$ Hz per He nucleus

In Hz: The first ionization frequency $5.95 \times 10^{15}$ Hz is the phase frequency required to remove the first electron. The second ionization frequency $1.32 \times 10^{16}$ Hz is the phase frequency to remove the second electron. The total electron binding frequency is $1.91 \times 10^{16}$ Hz — the phase frequency of the closed shell.

The fusion of four hydrogen atoms into one helium atom releases $26.7$ MeV, corresponding to a phase frequency of $6.45 \times 10^{21}$ Hz per He nucleus. This is the phase energy that powers stars.

3. Phase Entropy — The Phase Disorder of a Closed Shell

Quantity Value Hz Translation
Spin States $1$ (singlet — paired spins) $S = 0$ (no phase disorder — electrons are paired)
Magnetic Behavior Diamagnetic (paired electrons) Phase modes are paired — no unpaired phase modes
Entropy per Atom $S \approx 0$ The closed shell has minimum phase entropy

In Hz: The two electrons in the 1s orbital have opposite spins — they are paired. The phase entropy is zero. Helium is diamagnetic because there are no unpaired phase modes.

4. Phase Information — How Helium Phase-Locks with Others

Quantity Value Hz Translation
Valence Electrons $0$ No phase modes available for phase-locking
Bonding Capacity $0$ bonds Cannot phase-lock with others (inert)
Noble Gas Group 18 Complete phase-locking — no phase-locking bonds
Helium Compounds None stable under normal conditions The phase-locking is complete — no phase modes to share

In Hz: Helium has no valence phase modes. It cannot phase-lock with other atoms under normal conditions. It is the first inert phase-locking pattern.

5. Isotopes — Variations in Nuclear Phase-Locking

Isotope Nucleus Phase Composition Mass Defect (Hz) Stability Decay Mode
³He Helium-3 2p + 1n $f_{\text{binding}} = 7.72 \text{ MeV} / h \approx 1.86 \times 10^{21}$ Hz Stable
⁴He Helium-4 2p + 2n $f_{\text{binding}} = 28.3 \text{ MeV} / h \approx 6.84 \times 10^{21}$ Hz Stable
⁶He Helium-6 2p + 4n $f_{\text{decay}} = 1 / (0.8 \text{ s}) \approx 1.25$ Hz Unstable $\beta^- \to {}^6\text{Li} + e^- + \bar{\nu}_e$

In Hz: ⁴He is the most abundant and stable helium isotope. It has the highest binding energy per nucleon among light nuclei. ³He is stable but rare. ⁶He decays with a half-life of 0.8 seconds — a very rapid phase decoherence.

6. Phase Stability — How Long the Phase-Locking Holds

Aspect Value Hz Translation
Decay Rate (³He) $0$ $f_{\text{decay}} = 0$ — phase-locking is permanent
Decay Rate (⁴He) $0$ $f_{\text{decay}} = 0$ — phase-locking is permanent
Decay Rate (⁶He) $1 / 0.8 \text{ s}$ $f_{\text{decay}} \approx 1.25$ Hz — very rapid phase decoherence
Fusion Frequency $26.7$ MeV per He $f_{\text{fusion}} = 26.7 \text{ MeV} / h \approx 6.45 \times 10^{21}$ Hz

In Hz: ³He and ⁴He are stable — their phase-locking is permanent. ⁶He decays at a rate of $1.25$ Hz — a very rapid phase decoherence. The fusion of hydrogen into helium is the source of the sun's phase energy.

7. Phase States — How Helium Responds to Environment

State Conditions Phase Modes Hz Translation
Gas STP (He) Individual atoms — no molecular phase modes $f_{\text{atomic}} \sim 10^{14}$ Hz (electronic transitions)
Liquid $T < 4.2$ K Phonon modes, superfluid phase $f_{\text{phonon}} \sim k_B T / h \approx 8.7 \times 10^{10}$ Hz at 4.2 K
Solid $T < 1.0$ K (under pressure) Lattice vibrations $f_{\text{lattice}} \sim 10^{11}$ Hz
Plasma $T > 10,000$ K Ionized phase modes $f_{\text{plasma}} \sim 10^{14}$ Hz

In Hz: Helium responds to its environment by changing its phase-locking state. At STP, it is a gas of individual atoms. At very low temperatures, it becomes a liquid with phonon modes. Below 2.17 K, helium becomes a superfluid — a phase-locking state where viscosity disappears. At high temperatures, it becomes a plasma.

8. Cosmic Role — The Product of Stellar Fusion

Property Value Hz Translation
Cosmic Abundance 25% of baryonic mass The second most abundant phase-locking pattern in the universe
Formation Big Bang nucleosynthesis + stellar fusion $f_{\text{cosmic}} \approx 25\%$ of the universe's phase mass
Stellar Product 4H $\to$ He Phase energy released: $f_{\text{fusion}} \approx 6.45 \times 10^{21}$ Hz per He
Helium-4 $f_{\text{nuclear}} = 6.84 \times 10^{21}$ Hz The most stable light nucleus — the endpoint of stellar fusion

In Hz: Helium is the second most abundant phase-locking pattern in the universe. It was formed in the Big Bang and is produced in stars through fusion. ⁴He is the most stable light nucleus, with the highest binding energy per nucleon among light elements.

9. Phase Meaning — What Helium Reveals About the Hz Field

Helium is the first closed shell phase-locking pattern. It reveals that the Hz field can achieve complete phase-locking — the filling of the 1s phase mode. Two electrons phase-lock in the 1s orbital with opposite spins, creating a closed shell with no valence phase modes.

Helium is the product of stellar fusion — the phase transition from hydrogen to helium releases phase energy. It is the second most abundant element in the universe, and it is the most stable light nucleus. Helium reveals that phase-locking can be complete, stable, and inert.

In Hz: Helium is the first closed shell phase-locking pattern. It reveals that the Hz field can achieve complete phase-locking — the filling of the 1s phase mode. Its phase meaning is: phase-locking can be complete, stable, and inert.

Helium in Hz: The Complete Profile

Layer Key Hz Value
Quantum Genesis $f_e = 1.24 \times 10^{20}$ Hz; $f_{\text{He-4}} = 6.75 \times 10^{23}$ Hz; $\alpha \approx 1/137$
Quantum Identity $f_{\text{atomic}} \approx 2.48 \times 10^{20}$ Hz; 1s² — closed shell
Phase Energy $f_{\text{ionization 1}} \approx 5.95 \times 10^{15}$ Hz; $f_{\text{ionization 2}} \approx 1.32 \times 10^{16}$ Hz
Phase Entropy $S \approx 0$ (paired electrons, diamagnetic)
Phase Information 0 valence phase modes — inert
Isotopes ³He (stable), ⁴He (stable), ⁶He ($f_{\text{decay}} \approx 1.25$ Hz)
Phase Stability ³He and ⁴He: $f_{\text{decay}} = 0$; ⁶He: $f_{\text{decay}} \approx 1.25$ Hz
Phase States Gas ($f_{\text{atomic}} \sim 10^{14}$ Hz), Liquid ($f_{\text{phonon}} \sim 8.7 \times 10^{10}$ Hz), Solid ($f_{\text{lattice}} \sim 10^{11}$ Hz), Plasma ($f_{\text{plasma}} \sim 10^{14}$ Hz)
Cosmic Role 25% of baryonic mass; $f_{\text{fusion}} \approx 6.45 \times 10^{21}$ Hz; $f_{\text{He-4}} \approx 6.84 \times 10^{21}$ Hz
Phase Meaning The first closed shell — complete phase-locking, stable and inert

Bottom Line in Hz

Helium is the first closed shell atom — two electrons phase-locked in the 1s orbital: 1s². Quantum Genesis: the Dirac equation gives the electrons; QCD gives the nucleus; QED phase-locking with strength $\alpha \approx 1/137$ binds them; the vacuum spontaneously selects the 1s² configuration as the lowest-energy state for a helium nucleus. In Hz: the first ionization frequency is $f_{\text{rest}} = 5.95 \times 10^{15}$ Hz; the second ionization frequency is $f_{\text{rest}} = 1.32 \times 10^{16}$ Hz; the total electron binding frequency is $1.91 \times 10^{16}$ Hz. Helium is the first closed shell phase-locking pattern — complete, stable, and inert. It is the product of stellar fusion, the second most abundant element in the universe.

✉️ [email protected] 📞 WhatsApp 📍 Lisbon · Arroios