John Dalton, in the early 1800’s, gave us his version of the atomic theory.
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Transcript of John Dalton, in the early 1800’s, gave us his version of the atomic theory.
Democritus (460 BC-350BC) was a Greek philosopher who thought that
all matter was made of tiny indivisible particles he called atomos.
John Dalton, in the early 1800’s, gave us his version of the atomic
theory.
J.J. Thomson, a physicist, did a series of experiments with cathode ray tubes that proved the existence
of the electron.
Thomson continued to experiment and postulated that the atom
looked like plum pudding (think chocolate chip cookie) with protons and electrons in it.
Ernest Rutherford was a student of Thomson and wanted to learn
more. He conducted the gold foil experiment and found the
existence of the dense, positively charged nucleus.
Niels Bohr worked with Rutherford and went one step further. He said
the electrons were located in energy levels and gave us the
planetary model.
We progressed beyond the Bohr planetary model to today’s model
– one in which electrons are at specific energy levels but are
known to always be in motion and not orbiting the nucleus.