Dictionary Definition
excited adj
1 in an aroused state [ant: unexcited]
2 of persons; excessively affected by emotion;
"he would become emotional over nothing at all"; "she was worked up
about all the noise" [syn: aroused, emotional, worked
up]
3 marked by uncontrolled excitement or emotion;
"a crowd of delirious baseball fans"; "something frantic in their
gaiety"; "a mad whirl of pleasure" [syn: delirious, frantic, mad, unrestrained]
4 of e.g. a molecule; made reactive or more
reactive [syn: activated]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
IPA: /ɛksaɪtɛd/Verb
excited (past participle of excite)- Having great enthusiasm.
- He was very excited about his promotion.
- Being in a state of higher energy.
- The excited electrons give off light when they drop to a lower energy state.
Translations
having great enthusiasm
- Danish: spœndt
- Dutch: opgewonden
- Finnish: innostunut, innoissaan, kiihtynyt
- Russian: возбуждено, взволнован
- Spanish: entusiasmado, emocionado
being in a state of higher energy
- Finnish: virittynyt
Extensive Definition
Excitation is an elevation in energy level above
an arbitrary baseline energy state. In physics there is a specific
technical definition for energy level
which is often associated with an atom being excited to an excited
state.
In quantum
mechanics an excited state of a system (such as an atom, molecule or nucleus)
is any quantum
state of the system that has a higher energy than the ground state
(that is, more energy than the absolute minimum). The temperature of a group of
particles is indicative of the level of excitation.
The lifetime (see resonance) of a system in an
excited state is usually short: spontaneous
or induced
emission of a quantum of energy (such as a photon or a phonon) usually occurs shortly
after the system is promoted to the excited state, returning the
system to a state with lower energy (a less excited state or the
ground state). This return to a lower energy level is often loosely
described as decay and is the inverse of excitation.
Long-lived excited states are often called
metastable.
Long-lived nuclear
isomers and singlet
oxygen are two examples of this.
Atomic excitation
A simple example of this concept comes by considering the hydrogen atom.The ground state of the hydrogen atom corresponds
to having the atom's single electron in the lowest possible
orbit
(that is, the spherically symmetric "1s" wavefunction, which has the
lowest possible quantum
numbers). By giving the atom additional energy (for example, by
the absorption of a photon of an appropriate energy),
the electron is able to move into an excited state (one with one or
more quantum numbers greater than the minimum possible). If the
photon has too much energy, the electron will cease to be bound to the
atom, and the atom will become ionised.
After excitation the atom may return to a lower
excited state, or the ground state, by emitting a photon with a
characteristic energy. Emission of photons from atoms in various
excited states leads to an electromagnetic
spectrum showing a series of characteristic emission
lines (including, in the case of the hydrogen atom, the
Lyman
series, the Balmer
series, the Paschen
series, and the Brackett
series.)
An atom in a high excited state is termed
Rydberg
atom. A system of highly excited atoms can form a long-lived
condensed excited state e.g. a condensed phase made completely of
excited atoms: Rydberg
matter. Hydrogen can also be excited by heat or
electricity.
Perturbed gas excitation
A collection of molecules forming a gas can be considered in an excited state if one or more molecules are elevated to kinetic energy levels such that the resulting velocity distribution departs from the equilibrium Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution. This phenomenon has been studied in the case of a two-dimensional gas in some detail, analyzing the time taken to relax to equilibrium.See also
External links
excited in Czech: Excitovaný stav
excited in German: Angeregter Zustand
excited in French: Excitation (physique)
excited in Italian: Eccitazione
excited in Hebrew: עירור
excited in Dutch: Aangeslagen toestand
excited in Japanese: 励起状態
excited in Slovak: Excitácia (zvýšenie
energie)
excited in Finnish: Viritystila
excited in Swedish: Excitation
excited in Ukrainian: Збуджений стан
квантовомеханічної системи
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ablaze,
active, afire, aflame, agitated, agog, animated, antsy, antsy-pantsy, anxious, aquiver, ardent, aroused, atingle, attracted, atwitter, boiling over,
breathless, brisk, burning, bursting, carried away,
cathectic, chafing, concerned, cordial, curious, delighted, delirious, discomfited, discomposed, disconcerted, disquieted, disturbed, drunk, eager, ebullient, edgy, effervescent, elated, electrified, energetic, energized, enthusiastic, exhilarated, exuberant, fascinated, febrile, fervent, fervid, fevered, feverish, fidgety, fiery, fired, flaming, flurried, flushed, flustered, frantic, frenetic, frenzied, fretful, fretting, galvanized, glowing, hasty, hearty, heated, high, hopped up, hopped-up,
hot, hysterical, impassioned, impatient, impetuous, in a lather, in a
stew, in a sweat, inflamed, intense, interested, intoxicated, itchy, jittery, jumpy, keen, keen on, keyed up, lathered
up, lively, manic, moved, nervous, nervy, on edge, on fire, overwrought, passionate, perturbed, pink, piqued, ready to burst, red-hot,
restive, restless, roused, ruffled, shaken, shaken up, spirited, squirming, squirmy, steamed up, steaming, steamy, stimulated, stirred, stirred up, tantalized, thrilled, tickled, tingling, tingly, titillated, troubled, troublous, turbulent, turned on,
turned-on, uneasy,
unpatient, unpeaceful, unquiet, unrestrained, upset, vehement, vigorous, warm, whipped up, worked up, wound
up, wrought up, yeasty,
zealous