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The ATK basis sets only roughly correspond to the orbitals of the isolated atom. The role of the basis set is to provide functions in which we expand the electron density, and in principle they can be very different from atomic orbitals. In the particular method used in ATK, the are indeed atomic-like, and in your case the basis set consists of 2 sets of orbitals of s-type symmetry, 2 sets of p-type, and one set of d-type. The s and d orbitals with decent occupations can of course be said to correspond quite closely to the 4d and 5s shells, but clearly there is also some p-type components. This doesn't really correspond to occupied 5p orbitals, it's just how the electron cloud looks in the crystal, which of course is quite different from the isolated Ag atom.