Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Atom – a history of the smallest particle!

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Atom – a history of the smallest particle!"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Atom – a history of the smallest particle!

2 Ancient Greeks were the first to imagine the existence of tiny particles that could not be divided or broken into anything smaller The Greek word for indivisible is “Atomos” this is where we get the word “Atom” However the Greeks did not have the means to prove the existence of atoms through experiment

3 John Dalton The 12 year old headmaster!
In 1808 this English Chemist released a book on atomic theory to explain experiments he had done with gases He was widely praised and honoured but was very shy and shunned glory

4 Summary of Dalton’s atomic theory
All matter is made up of very small particles called atoms All atoms are indivisible they cannot be broken into smaller particles Atoms cannot be created or destroyed Spot the incorrect point!? Of course we know atoms can be broken down into electrons, neutrons and protons we will see now how we found this out!

5 Discovery of the electron
William Crookes in 1875 Proved that electrons existed by showing how cathode rays behaved in a vacuum tube

6 A battery is connected at its negative end called the CATHODE to a vacuum tube
When the current is turned on a glow comes from the tube Crookes showed that this was caused by some kind of radiation by placing a maltese cross in the path of the rays and showing that a shadow was formed

7

8 To prove the rays were coming from the cathode
Cathode Anode When Crookes placed a paddle wheel in between the cathode and the anode and switched on the current he noticed that the wheel turned away from the cathode this proved that the vanes of the paddle were being struck by particles coming from the cathode Remember CNAP Cathode Negative, Anode Positive

9 J.J. Thomson Englishman in 1897 who showed that the cathode rays were made of small charged particles

10 If there was no charge on the parallel plates in the middle the beam came through in a straight line
If there was a charge on the parallel plates in the middle the beam would move towards the positively charged plate

11 Thomson’s conclusions
Thomson concluded that since the cathode rays were attracted to the positive plate they must be made of negatively charged particles as opposites attract These negatively charged particles were called ELECTRONS CATHODE RAYS are streams of negatively charged electrons

12 The Plum Pudding Model A very simple model of an atom proposed by Thomson Since atoms are neutral and he knew electrons were negative he correctly said that there must also be positive charges He proposed that electrons were dotted in a positive cloud like raisins in a plum pudding!

13 The tiniest of particles!
In 1909 an American named Robert Millikan performed the OIL DROP EXPERIMENT to find the size of the charge on an electron and he then found the mass of an electron He found an electron has a mass of 9.1 x kg! very very very small

14 How???? Spray tiny oil drops between 2 charged metal plates
Ionise the air with an xray to free electrons When oil drops fall they pick up electrons and become charged Use a microscope to view a particular drop of oil and watch to see when it will be attracted up to the positive plate Change the charge on the positive palte until it is just enough to hold the drop in mid air! Do the maths and calculate the charge on the electron!

15 Discovery of the nucleus
Ernest Rutherford from New Zealand 1909 Used a radioactive source to fire alpha particles (positively charged particles) at a sheet of gold foil Expected that the particles would be slightly deflected as they passed through the “plum pudding” atoms in the gold foil

16 ! What actually happened What would happen in the plum pudding

17

18 Most alpha particles went straight through the gold foil, some were slightly deflected but others bounced right back and travelled back along there own path like they had bounced off something The only way to explain this was that the positive part of the atoms in the gold foil was concentrated in one small dense core – the NUCLEUS was discovered!

19 Discovery of the Proton
Rutherford and his team found that when small atoms like oxygen and nitrogen were bombarded they gave off positive particles but heavier atoms such as gold didn’t Reason was that bombarding broke up the nucleus in small atoms and released protons but in bigger atoms there were too many protons and the strong positive charge repelled the alpha particles

20 Discovery of the Neutron
James Chadwick If the nucleus was all protons it would fall apart as they would repel each other Chadwick a former student of Rutherfords bombarded beryllium with alpha particles and found that neutral particles were being knock out of the beryllium

21 Importance of neutrons
Stop nuclei coming apart Are used to split atoms of uranium to release nuclear energy in the atomic bomb and nuclear reactors

22 Properties of the sub atomic particles
Relative Charge Relative Mass Location Proton +1 1 Nucleus Neutron Electron -1 1838 Outside Nucleus

23 2007 Question 11 (a) (a) In 1910 Rutherford (pictured right) and his co-workers carried out an experiment in which thin sheets of gold foil were bombarded with alpha particles. The observations made during the experiment led to the discovery of the atomic nucleus. (i) Describe the model of atomic structure which existed immediately prior to this experiment. (7) (ii) In this experiment it was observed that most of the alpha particles went straight through the gold foil. Two other observations were made. State these other observations and explain how each helped Rutherford deduce that the atom has a nucleus. (12)


Download ppt "The Atom – a history of the smallest particle!"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google