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First of all, I thought hydrogen only had one electron orbital (1s),
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That's your misunderstanding.
Go back to the books / sources where you think you read that.
Do they really say (something like)
A single hydrogen atom has
multiple energy orbitals /levels.
The "lowest" electron energy level is labelled 1s. The single electron in an uncharged hydrogen atom can occupy no lower energy level than 1s. If an
appropriate level of energy (as e.m. radiation) hits the atom and is absorbed by the electron it will "jump" to a higher energy level. The energy distance of the electron jump is exactly equal to the energy of the absorbed incoming e.m. photon. That energy difference or jump is what determines if the incoming energy is
appropriate. The electron is said to be excited when it is in an energy level higher than 1s. So the single electron in an uncharged hydrogen atom can occupy any one of a large (infinite) number of energy levels. The difference between the energy levels / orbitals decreases until finally if the electron absorbs sufficient energy it can leave the influence of the hydrogen atom completely and the atom has become as H
+ ion.
I like Borek's analogy - very familiar, very understadable. Do you see why it is relevant?