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Atomic History How do we know all this stuff anyway?

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Presentation on theme: "Atomic History How do we know all this stuff anyway?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Atomic History How do we know all this stuff anyway?

2 If atoms are too small to see… About 6,000,000,000 (6 billion) people live on the earth About 300,000,000 (300 million) people live in the USA About 2,500,000 (2 million 5 hundred thousand) people live in Utah The average person is made of around 65,000,000,000,000 (65 trillion) cells There are about 7,000,000,000,0 00,000 (7 quadrillion) atoms in one cell. There are between 100 billion and 200 billion stars in our galaxy.

3 …how could we possibly know so much about them? If you counted one atom per second, it would take you 221,968,544 years to count all of the atoms in one cell! If you took the number of atoms that equal the number of people on the planet, and put them all in a straight line, it would be about 2 feet long.

4 Atoms are tiny! The ink dot on the letter “i” in your textbook contains about 500,000,000,000 atoms. (That’s more than the number of seconds in 500,000 years!)

5 A Greek beginning The Greeks were the first people to propose that everything is made up of tiny particles called atoms about 400 BC. The word “atom” means “indivisible” (Aristotle disagreed with Democritus about atoms.)

6 After the Greeks The idea of atoms being the building blocks of matter wasn’t seriously looked at for a long time after the Greeks came up with the idea.

7 John Dalton (1803) In 1803, John Dalton reintroduced the idea of atoms when he proposed that all matter is made up of atoms.

8 John Dalton (1803) Dalton came up with what is called the “Atomic Theory” Of the 5 parts of his atomic theory, 3 of them are still accepted today, and the other two are still considered to be “mostly” right.

9 After Dalton In the 1850’s, people began to see clues that atoms might be made up of even smaller particles. We now call these particles protons, neutrons, and electrons.

10 J. J. Thompson (1887) In 1887, J.J. Thompson used what is called a Cathode Ray Tube to learn about electrons.

11 J. J. Thompson (1887) By sending electricity through a vacuum tube, Thompson did several experiments through which he found that: –Electrons are negatively charged –Electrons are attracted to magnets –Electrons have mass

12 J. J. Thompson (1887) J.J. Thompson came up with a model of the atom that is called the “plum pudding” model. He thought that negatively charged electrons floated randomly around in a positively charged sphere.

13 Rutherford (1911) In 1911, Ernest Rutherford did an experiment called the “Gold foil” experiment.

14 Rutherford (1911) Rutherford shot positive particles at a very thin sheet of metal, and was able to record where they hit on the other side of the metal.

15 Rutherford (1911) The expected results, using the plum pudding model would look like this.

16 Rutherford (1911) Instead, Rutherford’s results looked like this. Rutherford’s experiment taught us that: –Protons are the positive part of an atom. –Protons are in the center of the nucleus and take up a very small part of the volume of the atom. (1/1,000,000,000,000 th ) –The nucleus contains most of the mass of the atom (99.9%). (All of the electrons in your whole body weigh about as much as 4 nickels.) –Most of the atom is empty space.

17 Niels Bohr (1913) In 1913, Niels Bohr developed a model of the atom in which the electrons move in “orbits” around the nucleus, similar to how the planets orbit around the sun. This is called the Bohr model.

18 Our Modern Model Today our model of the atom is one with the nucleus in the center and a “electron cloud” around the nucleus to show the areas where an electron might be found.

19 Electron repulsion Electrons repel each other. This is why you don’t ever REALLY touch anything, and why you don’t fall through the floor. The force of electron repulsion is more than a trillion trillion trillion times stronger than gravity. Electrons (unlike protons and neutrons) cannot be broken down into smaller parts.

20 Problems with using a model atom There are a few limitations (problems) that occur anytime you try to make a model of an atom.

21 Problems with using a model atom 1- You can’t accurately show the distance between particles in the atom. –If the nucleus were the size of a bean, the atom would be the size of a football stadium. –If the nucleus were the size of a tennis ball, the electrons would reach 4 miles out. –If the nucleus were the size of a basketball in the center of the Earth, the electrons would be cherry pits flying around in the outer atmosphere.

22 Problems with using a model atom The motion of electrons cannot be accurately shown in most models. –Electrons do not move in nice circular orbits around the nucleus, but that is how most models have to show them, because they can’t show the electron movement. –(Electrons move so fast that they could circle the Earth in 18 seconds). Electron motion video clip

23 Future Models Our current model of the atom will probably change as we learn more, experiment more, and build on the knowledge of those who came before. Atomic movie


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