higherlying
Higherlying is an adjective used in physics to describe energy states that lie above a chosen reference level, usually the ground state. In atomic and molecular systems, higher-lying states are excited states with discrete energy levels. Their populations depend on temperature, radiant input, or electronic excitation. Transitions between higher-lying and lower states emit photons with characteristic energies, forming spectral lines; absorption can raise systems from lower to higher states.
Near the ionization limit, many atoms exhibit a crowd of closely spaced higher-lying levels called Rydberg
In solids, higher-lying electronic states include excited bands above the valence band. Optical pumping can promote
The term is relative and broad; higher-lying can refer to any level above a reference such as
See also: excited state; energy level; spectroscopy; Rydberg state; ionization.