Brownian Motion: Geiger-Marsden Experiment
Brownian Motion: Geiger-Marsden Experiment
Brownian Motion: Geiger-Marsden Experiment
The Geiger–Marsden experiment:
Left: Expected results: alpha particles passing through the plum pudding model of the atom with negligible
deflection.
Right: Observed results: a small portion of the particles were deflected by the concentrated positive charge of
the nucleus.
J. J. Thomson thought that the negatively-charged electrons were distributed throughout the atom in
a sea of positive charge that was distributed across the whole volume of the atom. [14] This model is
sometimes known as the plum pudding model.
Ernest Rutherford and his colleagues Hans Geiger and Ernest Marsden came to have doubts about
the Thomson model after they encountered difficulties when they tried to build an instrument to
measure the charge-to-mass ratio of alpha particles (these are positively-charged particles emitted
by certain radioactive substances such as radium). The alpha particles were being scattered by the
air in the detection chamber, which made the measurements unreliable. Thomson had encountered
a similar problem in his work on cathode rays, which he solved by creating a near-perfect vacuum in
his instruments. Rutherford didn't think he'd run into this same problem because alpha particles are
much heavier than electrons. According to Thomson's model of the atom, the positive charge in the
atom is not concentrated enough to produce an electric field strong enough to deflect an alpha
particle, and the electrons are so lightweight they should be pushed aside effortlessly by the much
heavier alpha particles. Yet there was scattering, so Rutherford and his colleagues decided to
investigate this scattering carefully.[15]
Between 1908 and 1913, Rutheford and his colleagues performed a series of experiments in which
they bombarded thin foils of metal with alpha particles. They spotted alpha particles being deflected
by angles greater than 90°. To explain this, Rutherford proposed that the positive charge of the atom
is not distributed throughout the atom's volume as Thomson believed, but is concentrated in a tiny
nucleus at the center. Only such an intense concentration of charge could produce an electric field
strong enough to deflect the alpha particles as observed. [15]
Discovery of isotopes
While experimenting with the products of radioactive decay, in 1913 radiochemist Frederick
Soddy discovered that there appeared to be more than one type of atom at each position on
the periodic table.[16] The term isotope was coined by Margaret Todd as a suitable name for different
atoms that belong to the same element. J. J. Thomson created a technique for isotope
separation through his work on ionized gases, which subsequently led to the discovery of stable
isotopes.[17]
Bohr model
The Bohr model of the atom, with an electron making instantaneous "quantum leaps" from one orbit to another
with gain or loss of energy. This model of electrons in orbits is obsolete.
In 1913 the physicist Niels Bohr proposed a model in which the electrons of an atom were assumed
to orbit the nucleus but could only do so in a finite set of orbits, and could jump between these orbits
only in discrete changes of energy corresponding to absorption or radiation of a photon. [18] This
quantization was used to explain why the electrons' orbits are stable (given that normally, charges in
acceleration, including circular motion, lose kinetic energy which is emitted as electromagnetic
radiation, see synchrotron radiation) and why elements absorb and emit electromagnetic radiation in
discrete spectra.[19]
Later in the same year Henry Moseley provided additional experimental evidence in favor of Niels
Bohr's theory. These results refined Ernest Rutherford's and Antonius van den Broek's model, which
proposed that the atom contains in its nucleus a number of positive nuclear charges that is equal to
its (atomic) number in the periodic table. Until these experiments, atomic number was not known to
be a physical and experimental quantity. That it is equal to the atomic nuclear charge remains the
accepted atomic model today.[20]
Chemical bonds between atoms were explained by Gilbert Newton Lewis in 1916, as the interactions
between their constituent electrons.[21] As the chemical properties of the elements were known to
largely repeat themselves according to the periodic law,[22] in 1919 the American chemist Irving
Langmuir suggested that this could be explained if the electrons in an atom were connected or
clustered in some manner. Groups of electrons were thought to occupy a set of electron shells about
the nucleus.[23]
The Bohr model of the atom was the first complete physical model of the atom. It described the
overall structure of the atom, how atoms bond to each other, and predicted the spectral lines of
hydrogen. Bohr's model was not perfect and was soon superseded by the more accurate
Schroedinger model (see below), but it was sufficient to evaporate any remaining doubts that matter
is composed of atoms. For chemists, the idea of the atom had been a useful heuristic tool, but
physicists had doubts as to whether matter really is made up of atoms as nobody had yet developed
a complete physical model of the atom.