xiao1985 said:
ok, why would classical physics say there are irradiation at low wavelength at all?
A bit of history might be helpful here: back in the 1800's a Scottish guy by the name of James Clerk Maxwell came up with a theory of electromagnetism which was so successful that pretty much everyone thought it was going to be the last word. For example, he predicted that electromagnetic radiation would travel at 3 x 10^8 m/s. It was only then that physicists realised that light was a form of electromagnetic radiation (EMR).
According to Maxwell's equations, when an electrically charged particle moves in a circle e.g. the in the Year 9 model of the atom, with electrons "orbiting" the nucleus, then the frequency of the emitted EMR is just the frequency at which the electron orbits e.g. if the electron orbits 50 times per second, then the EMR has a frequency of 50 Hz.
So, when Rutherford came along and showed that the nucleus was this incredibly tiny, dense, highly positively charged thing, & Maxwell's equations said that electrons orbiting the nucleus should emit EMR, "Houston, we have a problem". Of course, as soon as electrons emit EMR they're losing a bit of energy, and so they spiral in to an orbit closer to the nucleus. Because of the inverse square law for the force of attraction between electric charges, this meant that the electron started moving a lot faster, so the frequency with which it orbited the nucleus increased, and it gives off more EMR (with higher & higher frequencies - therefore shorter and shorter wavelengths). Until finally the electron collides with the nucleus. ZANG! End of atom. According to Maxwell's theory, atoms should only last for about 10^-18 seconds. Given that atoms have been around for about 4 x 10^+17 seconds, this created a slight problem for theoretical physicists. It is never good when your theory predicts something that is a million, million, million, million, million, million times smaller than an observed value.
Quantum mechanics came to the rescue. It started with Bohr and then guys like Schrodinger and Heissenberg and (eventually) Dirac gave us a decent theory about electrons that actually matched with what people measured about them in the physics lab.
Hope this helps.