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ERNEST RUTHERFORD & THE GOLD FOIL EXPERIMENT By Jake Easton & James Lampmann.

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Presentation on theme: "ERNEST RUTHERFORD & THE GOLD FOIL EXPERIMENT By Jake Easton & James Lampmann."— Presentation transcript:

1 ERNEST RUTHERFORD & THE GOLD FOIL EXPERIMENT By Jake Easton & James Lampmann

2 Birth  He was born on August 30, 1871 in Nelson, New Zealand  His parents were James and Martha Rutherford  He was one of 12 kids

3 Education  In 1887, he won a scholarship to Nelson College  From 1890 to 1893, he attended Canterbury College at the University of New Zealand  In 1894 he received an 1851 Exhibition Science Scholarship which allowed him to go to the Trinity College, Cambridge.  While he was there he studied as a research student under J.J. Thompson at the Cavendish Laboratory.

4 Jobs/ Career  In 1897 the MacDonald Chair of Physics at McGill University in Montreal, Canada became open. In 1898 he left New Zealand to take the job.  In 1907 he returned to England to become the Langworthy Professor of Physics at the University of Manchester  In 1919, he took a job as a Cavendish Professor of Physics at Cambridge.

5 Jobs/ Career Continued  After that he became:  Chairman of the Advisory Council  Department of Scientific and Industrial Research  Director of the Royal Society Mond Laboratory at Cambridge  A professor of Natural Philosophy at Royal Institution, London

6 The Gold Foil Experiment  Rutherford did this experiment in 1910  He did it in order to:  Learn more about the structure of an atom  Confirm J.J. Thomson’s “plum pudding” model of an atom:

7 What He Accepted  Rutherford accepted that electrons were present in atoms and that they were negatively charged  He also accepted that there was something inside an atom that made it have a neutral charge and accepted the plum pudding model that had positively charged matter throughout

8 The Experiment  It was set up with a thick lead box with a small opening surrounding a source of heavy, alpha particles  A small beam of the particles was formed pointing at an extremely thin piece of gold foil (approximately 3.4x10 -14 m thick)

9 The Experiment Continued  He used a fluorescent rotatable detector which has a microscope and a screen coated with zinc sulphide to detect the alpha particles which he wrapped in a circle around the gold foil  The entire experiment was performed in an evacuated chamber in order to prevent scattering by the air molecules  Rutherford expected that all of the particles would go through the foil without any deflection

10 Results  When he performed the experiment, he received some interesting results  When the particles hit the foil, most went straight through, but some of the particles were deflected off at angles and even a few bounced right back off of the foil.

11 Conclusions SSince most of the particles went straight through, he concluded that most of the space in an atom is empty SSince some of the particles deflected or bounced straight back, he concluded that there must be a concentrated area that is positively charged AAlso since only a very small amount of the particles were deflected, he concluded that the area of the positively charged particles must be very small

12 “Nucleus of an atom”  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8RuO2ekNG w http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8RuO2ekNG w

13 Rutherford’s Atomic Model  Was also known as the “planetary model”  It had 2 changes compared to the plum pudding model:  A high concentrated area of positively charges particles is central and very small compared to the rest of the atom (later named the nucleus)  The nucleus contains most of the atomic mass of the atom  Rutherford was the first to discover and prove the existence of positive central charge

14 Rutherford’s Atomic Theory  Most of the space in an atom is empty  Almost all the mass of an atom is concentrated in the center of the atom  In the center of the atom there are positively charged particles  The negatively charged particles revolve around the nucleus in different orbits  The center region of the nucleus is extremely small

15 Sources  http://www.rutherford.org.nz/biography.htm http://www.rutherford.org.nz/biography.htm  http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemis try/laureates/1908/rutherford-bio.html http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemis try/laureates/1908/rutherford-bio.html  http://physics.tutorvista.com/modern- physics/rutherford-s-gold-foil-experiment.html http://physics.tutorvista.com/modern- physics/rutherford-s-gold-foil-experiment.html


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