The theory of the atom

  • 375

    Aristotle

    Aristotle
    Greek philosopher Aristotle, felt that different substances were made of earth, fire, air, and water. Aristotle did not have an atomic model because he thought atoms did not exist.
  • 400

    Democritus

    Democritus
    Greek philosopher Democritus first suggested that all substances consisted of tiny indestructible particles called atoms.
  • Antoine Lavoisier

    Antoine Lavoisier
    Antoine Lavoisier provided the formula for the protection of matter in chemical reactions. He also discovered the difference between an element and a compound.
  • Coloumb

    Coloumb
    Coloumb formulated the Coulomb's law. The law states that the force between two electrical charges is proportional to the product of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them, one of the main forces involved in atomic reactions.
  • John Dalton

    John Dalton
    John Dalton’s atomic theory proposed that:
    • all matter consisted of tiny particles called atoms
    • atoms could not be divided into smaller particles
    • atoms of the same element were alike
    • atoms combined in simple whole number ratios.
  • Crookes

    Crookes
    Crookes created the Crookes’ tube. He demonstrated that cathode rays travel in straight lines and produce phosphorescence and heat when they strike certain materials.
  • Sir J.J Thomson

    Sir J.J Thomson
    Sir J. J. Thomson explained that the atom contained negatively charged particles called electrons. His model suggested that atoms were positively charged spheres with negatively charged
    electrons embedded in them like the
    fruit in a plum pudding.
  • W.K Roentgen

    W.K Roentgen
    W.K. Roentgen discovered x-rays when he was experimenting with cathode-ray tubes.
  • Becquerel

    Becquerel
    Becquerel discovered radioactivity. He discovered radioactivity when he was investigating uranium and other radioactive substances.
  • Marie Curie

    Marie Curies discovered radium and polonium. He discovered radium and polonium when they started to investigate radioactive substances
  • Max Planck

    Max Planck
    Max Planck originated the quantum theory.
  • Albert Einstein

    Albert Einstein
    Albert Einstein postulated that light was made up of different particles that, in addition to wavelike behavior, demonstrate certain properties unique to particles. He also brought forth the theory of relativity.
  • Robert Millikan

    Robert Millikan
    Robert Millikan discovered the electric charge of the electron
  • Lord Rutherford

    Lord Rutherford
    Lord Rutherford proposed that the atom consisted mostly of empty space with a dense nucleus containing positively charged protons in the centre. Negatively charged electrons orbited the nucleus. Although Lord Rutherford’s model of the atom was essentially the same as today’s accepted model, its one flaw was that it proposed that the orbiting electrons would eventually lose energy and spiral in towards the nucleus.
  • Niels Bohr

    Niels Bohr
    Niels Bohr, a scientist who had studied with Rutherford, modified the eve model by suggesting that electrons orbit the nucleus at different energy levels. Only electrons with specific amounts of energy could exist at each level. His model proposed that electrons could move from one level to another by gaining or losing ‘packets’ of energy. Although Bohr’s model explained why electrons did not spiral in towards the nucleus, it did not explain all of the known properties of atoms.
  • Geiger

    Geiger
    Geiger introduced the first detector of alpha particles and other radiations.
  • Erwin Shrodinger

    Erwin Shrodinger
    Erwin Shrodinger introduced the Shroedinger Equation, a wave equation that describes the form of the probability waves that govern the motion of small particles and how these waves are altered by external influences.
  • Sir James Chadwick

    Sir James Chadwick
    Sir James Chadwick discovered that the nucleus contained particles called neutrons, as well as positively charged protons. Neutrons had no electric charge and a mass about the same as a proton.
  • Otto Hahn

    Otto Hahn
    Otto Hahn discovered nuclear fission, in which the nucleus of an atom breaks up into two separate nuclei, while experimenting with uranium.
  • Lise Meitner

    Lise Meitner
    Lise Meitner worked with Otto Hahn to discover uranium fission.
  • Glenn T. Seaborg

    Glenn T. Seaborg
    Glenn T. Seaborg isolated and identified elements heavier than uranium, and in the process, added elements number 94 - 102, and 106.
  • Murray Gell-Mann and George Zweig

    Murray Gell-Mann and George Zweig
    Murray Gell-Mann and George Zweig brought forth the idea of "quarks", little bits of matter which when used kind of like building blocks, serve to explain some complex chemical substances..