Atomic Model

  • Dalton Model

    John Dalton pictures atoms as tiny, indestructible particles, with no internal structure.
  • Thomson Model

    J.J. Thomson, a British scientist discovers the electron. The later leads to his "plum-pudding" model. He pictures electrons embedded in a sphere of positive electrical charge.
  • Hantaro Nagoaka

    A Japanese physicist, suggests that an atom has a central nucleus. Electrons move in orbits like the rings around Saturn.
  • Rutherford Model

    New Zealand physicist Ernest Rutherford finds that an atom has a small, dense, positively charged nucleus. Electrons move around the nucleus.
  • Changed Rutherford's model

    Niels Bohr changed Rutherford's model to include newer discoveries about how the energy of an atom changes when it absorbs or emits light.
  • Bohr Model

    In Niels Bohr's model, the electron moves in a circular orbit at fixed distance from the nucleus
  • French physicist

    Luis de Broglie proposes that moving particles like electrons have some properties of waves. Within a few years, experimental evidence supports the idea.
  • Electron Cloud Model

    Erwin Schrödinger develops mathematical equations to describe the motion of electrons in atoms. His work leads to the electron cloud model.
  • New theoretical calculations and experimental results

    In 1926 the Austrian physicist Erwin Schodinger used these new results to device and solve a mathematical equation describing the behavior of the electron in a hydrogen atom.
  • James Chadwick

    An English physicist, confirms the existence of neutrons, which have no charge. Atomic nuclei contain neutrons and positively charged protons.