Atoms Project By Grace Arnott

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    Continuum Model

    The Ancient Greeks believed that all matter was made up of only four fundamental elements: earth, fire, air, and water. Thi swas the basis of the continuum model, which predicted that regardless of the number of times you halve a piece of matter, it can always be broken down into even smaller pieces.
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    Solid Ball Model

    Greek philosopher Democritus suggested that matter was not continuous but made up of tiny, solid and unbreakable particles. He was the first to use the term atomos meaning 'indivisable'.
  • Plum Pudding Model

    British Scientist Joseph John Thomson (J.J. Thomson) discovered the electron and its negative charge in 1897. However, Thomson knew that there must be a source of positive charge in the atom to make the atom charge neutral. Therefore, in 1904 he proposed the Plum Pudding Model. In this model, an atom is thought of as a round ball of positive charge with negatively charged electons embedded in it (like plums or sultans in a plum pudding)
  • Dynamide Model

    Hungarian scientist Philip Lenard described atoms as mostly empty spaces filled with fast-moving 'dynamides'. These were neutrally charged particles made up of a heavy positive partilces stuck to a light negative particle.
  • Nuclear Model

    New Zealand scientist Ernest Rutherford performed an experiment where he fired a beam of positively charged alpha particles at gold foil. He found that while most of the alpha particles went through the foil, a small number were deflected. This led to the development of a nuclear model of the atom in which most of the mass is believed to be contained in a small positive nucleus surronded by a large space occupied by negative electrons.
  • Planetary Model

    Danish scientist Niels Bohr modified Rutherford's model and proposed that electrons can only travel along certain pathways around the nucleus, called orbits. As a result, this model is sometimes called the planetary model. This model explained why different elements produced different-coloured light when heated. This
  • Planetary Model with Neutrons

    English scientist James Chadwick discovered the neutron, showing that the nucleus was not just a mass of positive charge but a cluster of positively charged protons and charge-neutral neutrons.
  • Electron Cloud Model

    Today, scientists have concluded that the position of an electron in an atom can never be known exactly. This means that it is impossible for electrons to revolve around the nucleus in specific orbits as suggested by Niels Bohr. Instead, the electrons form clouds around the nucleus. Scientists can predict the shape of these clouds but never the exact location of electrons within them.