History of Atom Guided Notes - Parkway Schools / … o… ·  · 2012-01-09Note on History of the...

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Name_________________________ Date_____________ Note on History of the Atom Why is learning about the atom important….? The atom was considered to be an “imaginary” thing, something that people laughed at! Roosevelt trusted Einstein, and funded his secret research known as the “Manhattan Project” In a few short years, the idea of an invisible atom had been developed into a city-destroying weapon - the atomic bomb! They figured out they could split atoms apart, and this would release tons of energy! The History of the Atom……. o Democritus was the first to suggest that all matter was made of ______________! o The name atom comes from his Greek word, “______________”, which means not dividable or whole! o Democritus’ ideas were crushed by another Greek Philosopher, named………. ………………______________________!!!! Aristotle didn’t believe in atoms o Aristotle asked Democritus questions: If we are made of atoms, what holds us together? Why can’t we see these atoms? Why don’t we fall down like a bag of marbles? What’s in between atoms? Democritus was unable to answer these questions……. o And so, people continued to think that matter was continuous - your body, the world around us was one continuous piece…. o This philosophy continued for centuries……. Many years later…. o Middle Ages: 5 th -16 th Century o Alchemy: medieval “chemistry” o All matter made of 4 elements – _____________ , _____________ , _____________, ____________ During the 1700’s and 1800’s…. Scientists were doing large, observable, basic experiments They were doing experiments with stoves, pots, ovens, and basic glassware! With observable properties came explanations! _____________________-the act of reasoning from factual knowledge or evidence

Transcript of History of Atom Guided Notes - Parkway Schools / … o… ·  · 2012-01-09Note on History of the...

Page 1: History of Atom Guided Notes - Parkway Schools / … o… ·  · 2012-01-09Note on History of the Atom Why is learning about the atom important….? ... Why is Thomson’s model

Name_________________________ Date_____________

Note on History of the Atom

� Why is learning about the atom important….? • The atom was considered to be an “imaginary” thing, something that people laughed at!

• Roosevelt trusted Einstein, and funded his secret research known as the “Manhattan Project”

• In a few short years, the idea of an invisible atom had been developed into a city-destroying weapon - the atomic bomb! They figured out they could split atoms apart, and this would release tons of energy!

� The History of the Atom……. o Democritus was the first to suggest that all matter was made of ______________! o The name atom comes from his Greek word,

“______________”, which means not dividable or whole! o Democritus’ ideas were crushed by another Greek Philosopher, named……….

………………______________________!!!!

� Aristotle didn’t believe in atoms o Aristotle asked Democritus questions:

� If we are made of atoms, what holds us together?

� Why can’t we see these atoms?

� Why don’t we fall down like a bag of marbles?

� What’s in between atoms?

� Democritus was unable to answer these questions……. o And so, people continued to think that matter was continuous - your body, the world around us

was one continuous piece…. o This philosophy continued for centuries…….

� Many years later…. o Middle Ages: 5th -16th Century o Alchemy: medieval “chemistry” o All matter made of 4 elements –

_____________ , _____________ , _____________, ____________

� During the 1700’s and 1800’s…. • Scientists were doing large, observable, basic experiments

• They were doing experiments with stoves, pots, ovens, and basic glassware!

• With observable properties came explanations!

• _____________________-the act of reasoning from factual knowledge or evidence

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� John Dalton…… (1766-1844)

o A __________________________! o Described what was seen by scientists in terms of _____________________!

� John Dalton theorized that these substances were made of atoms!

o THE ATOMIC THEORY OF MATTER! (1803)

� All _____________________ are made of tiny, solid, indestructible particles known as atoms

� All atoms of one element are the _______________

� Atoms of _________________ elements are different

� Atoms of different elements form compounds in whole number ratios

� Atoms are not created or destroyed in chemical reactions, only how they are combined to form compounds

• John Dalton’s theory was wrong in one respect……..

�John Dalton’s theory was wrong in one respect……..

Atoms are not solid and indestructible like marbles….. � They contain different parts……. � However, scientists did not know this until parts of the atom were discovered…..

What part of the atom do you think was discovered first…..?

�THE _____________________…! Why do you think it was the first part of the atom to be discovered…..?

________________________________________________________________

�Benjamin Franklin in the Early 1800’s! o Lots of basic work with _________________ o Matter has charge! o There are two types of “_____________” in the world:

� + charged objects � charged objects

� Ben Franklin is the first to come up with these names positive & negative. o Franklin didn’t know that these charges were part of the ________________.

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�J.J. THOMSON � In 1897, Thomson used a ___________________________________________ (CRT)

to prove that an atom had a ________________________ particle known as an electron’

� He believed that __________________ were distributed throughout an atom

� This model is known as the “__________________________________________”.

Electrons are stuck throughout an atom just like plums are stuck throughout pudding.

Plum Pudding is an English dessert

� Cathode Ray Tube, or Crooke’s Tube

� This was one of the very first experiments to be done with electricity! � __________________ designed this tube in 1879. � The cathode ray (travels from cathode to anode) inside glows � Crookes was convinced this beam consisted of charged particles

� So what are Cathode Rays….?

♣ ________________________, in 1897, answered this question!

♣ Thomson used a Crooke’s tube and two charged plates above and below the beam

♣ Which way do you think the beam bent….?

♣ The Beam was attracted to _____________plate,

and was deflected from _______________ plate!

♣ The beam could also be deflected with a magnet

♣ From this, he said that the beam was made

of ___________________ charged particles,

called ______________________!

♣ He was looking at electrons, which are part of the atom!

�The cathode ray tube was the beginning to the modern day…..

____________________

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�Who puts all of this information together into “The Big Picture”?

• J.J. Thomson theorized that these negative and positive particles were part of the

atom!

• We are all made of charge!

• He develops the first working model of the atom,

known as the ______________________________________!

• This rejected ____________________ idea that atoms were solid particles like

marbles that weren’t made of smaller pieces

�Thomson Analogy - ___________________________ Draw:

�Why is Thomson’s model wrong….?

♣ A scientist named Ernest Rutherford figured it out!

♣ He shoots big heavy alpha (_) particles (with + charge) at ultrathin gold foil

♣ He expected most to go through the atom.

♣ Very few were deflected, and some even bounced straight back!

♣ Rutherford described this as a bowling ball being sent at a piece of paper, full

speed, and bouncing back!

�ERNEST RUTHERFORD � In 1908, he performed his famous _____________________________________.

� His experiment proved that an atom is mostly ________________________.

� It also proved that an atom has a small and dense positively charged center called

a _________________________.

�The Gold Foil Experiment….

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� Rutherford’s “nuclear” model! Draw:

� What is going on….? � Most of the ______________ particles are going straight through!

� A few of the _____________________________ are bouncing off of something!

� Alpha particles are _______________and _________________________!

o What could they be bouncing off of ?

o They must be bouncing off of something that is….

_____________________________________

Rutherford theorized that all of the protons weren’t scattered about, like in a chocolate

chip cookie, but were all ___________________________ into a tiny, dense __________________,

which he called the ________________________!

�Rutherford Analogy - __________________ Draw:

�What is the relative size of the atom….? ♣ An atomic model the size of Busch Stadium and parking would contain a pea sized nucleus containing

95.95% of the atoms mass.

♣ The _____________ at the pitcher’s mound would be the ____________________, and an

_______________ crawling on the parking lot outside would be an ________________________!

♣ The atom is mostly…..

♣ _______________________________________! _______________________________!

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� Structure of the Atom o Inside Nucleus:

� Protons (p+) - have ____________, _______________ charge, & determine identity of ___________________

� Neutrons (n) - have _________________, ___________ charge o Outside Nucleus:

� Electrons (e-) - ________________ charge, ________ mass

� Number of particles in neutral atom • # p+ usually = # e-

• Atomic Number = # p+

• Mass Number = # p+ + # n

� So is this the final model of the atom today… __________! o A scientist named ________________________, a great friend of Einstein, noticed

something weird about _____________________.

o A hydrogen atom consists of ____________________ orbiting ______________….

o Atoms can give off light when they are excited with _________________!

o Think about light bulbs, neon lights, headlights….

With one electron, how many different types of energy or colors of light do you think

hydrogen can give off….?

� NEILS BOHR � He wondered about the exact location of _______________in an atom.

� He concluded in 1913 that an electron had a certain amount of energy

which keeps an electron moving around the nucleus in a region called an

__________________ level.

� He described an atom much like the ___________________________ in

that electrons orbit around the nucleus in energy levels just as

_________________orbit around the sun

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� Bohr Analogy - ______________________ Draw:

� Bohr came up with a new model for the atom…

� Bohr suggested that _____________ could move to many locations or “_____________levels”

within the atom!

� The electron was _______________ to more than one location in the atom!

� In Bohr’s Model of the atom, electrons orbit the nucleus like planets orbit the sun. It is called

THE ____________________________MODEL.

� When electrons jump up to different energy levels, they eventually fall back down and give off

_______________________!

� Electrons in Energy Levels Level maximum number

of electrons

1 ____

2 ____

3 ____

4 ____

� WAVE MODEL or ELECTRON CLOUD-Modern Atomic Theory � In 1926, it was stated that it is impossible to know the exact

location and motion of an electron or small particle= Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle.

� Electrons don’t orbit the nucleus in simple, well-defined paths. This is why chemists often show electron orbitals as

cloudy regions. The more dots in the cloud, the more likely an electron would be found there.

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� Electron Cloud Analogy - _____________________________

� Electron Cloud Model

• Electrons not in fixed orbits (like Bohr’s model), instead is areas or

“clouds”

• Shows where we are most likely to find an electron

• Most current model

Draw the 4 different Models: