1200px stylised atom with three bohr model orbits and stylised nucleus.svg

Atomic Timeline

  • 430 BCE

    Leucippus' & Democritus' Atomic Theory

    Leucippus' & Democritus' Atomic Theory
    Greek philosopher Leucippus and his student Democritus were studying matter when they developed a theory. They believed that the matter was made of tiny particles that were so small they could not be cut in half. They gave these particles the name Atomos which means uncuttable. There theory on atomos (or atoms) came from the idea that if something is cut in half enough times, it can no longer be split.
  • Mikhail Lomonosov & The Law Of Conservation Of Mass

    Mikhail Lomonosov & The Law Of Conservation Of Mass
    This law discovered/proposed by Lomonosov states that matter neither increases nor decreases in a closed system. This means, that for reactants and products, the number of atoms (and type) must be equal.
  • John Dalton's Atomic Theory

    John Dalton's Atomic Theory
    Dalton proposed that substances would always break down into the same elements. He believed that the combinations of these elements were atoms.
  • J. J. Thomson's Plum Pudding Model

    J. J. Thomson's Plum Pudding Model
    J.J. Thomson first discovered the electron in 1897. In his Plum Pudding Model, Thomson used plums to portray negativley and postivetly charged electrons packed together making an atom.
  • Neils Bohr

    Neils Bohr
    Neils Bohr, also Thomson's student, suggested that electrons orbit the nucleus at set distances and energies.
  • Ernest Rutherford' (Father of the Nuclear Age)

    Ernest Rutherford' (Father of the Nuclear Age)
    Ernest Rutherford, J.J. Thomson's student, discovered the nucleus by shooting molecules at gold foil. He noticed that most passed through, but some bounced off. This meant that atoms contained mostly empty space. He also found a high concentration of meolecules at the center of the atom. THis he named the nucleus.
  • Werner Heisenberg

    Werner Heisenberg
    Heisenberg suggested that it is impossible to determine the exact speed and position of electrons.