Not totally correct. If you assume that a magnetic field can form around the path of a solitary charge, you are assuming the presence of an electric-field energy around a stationary solitary charge. Although there is a field between the electron and the proton in the Bohr atom, the two charges are not moving tangentially relative to each other as is required for a magnetic field to form.icarus wrote:In any case, the Bohr atom model has a electron and a proton so it is not a case of a solitary charge. It has the field of a pair of charges, one positive, one negative orbiting an inertial center of mass.
But let us just stick the experimentally unverified assumptions that there is an electric energy-field around a stationary solitary electron. The fact is that ALL the electric-energy in three-dimensional space is equal to the mass of the solitary electron. There is none left to manifest around a solitary electron.