2. In 1804, almost a century before the nucleus was discovered, the English scientist John Dalton provided evidence for the existence of the atom. Dalton thought that atoms were the smallest particles of matter, which couldn't be divided into smaller particles. He modeled atoms with solid wooden balls. In 1897, another English scientist, named J. J. Thomson, discovered the electron. It was first subatomic particle to be identified. Because atoms are neutral in electric charge, Thomson assumed that atoms must also contain areas of positive charge to cancel out the negatively charged electrons. He thought that an atom was like a plum pudding, consisting mostly of positively charged matter with negative electrons scattered through it.
The nucleus of the atom was discovered next. It was discovered in 1911 by a scientist from New Zealand named Ernest Rutherford, who is pictured in Figure below. Through his clever research, Rutherford showed that the positive charge of an atom is confined to a tiny massive region at the center of the atom, rather than being spread evenly throughout the “pudding” of the atom as Thomson had suggested.

Question: Why did Thomson think that the atom also had to have a positive charge?

Question: What two particles are found in the nucleus?

3.Question: What particle did Rutherford discover in the nucleus?
4.Question: What did Rutherford predict was also in the nucleus?
5.Question: How did Rutherford describe the size of the nucleus?
6.Question: According to Rutherford, how was Thomson's model of the atom incorrect?
7.Question: How are all atoms of an element identical?

Respuesta :

1. Because atoms are neutral in electric charge, Thomson assumed that atoms must also contain positive charge to cancel out the negatively charged electrons.

2 atoms and electrons

3 atoms

4 the positive charge of an atom was confined to a tiny massive region at the center of the atom instead of being evenly distributed like a “pudding” as Thomson had suggested

5 the size of the nucleus was a “tiny massive region at the center of the atom”

6 Thomson proposed that the charge of the atom was evenly distributed in the nucleus, like a “pudding” which Rutherford proved false.

7 They all have a neutral charge

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