Atomic Timeline

By OzanG
  • Period: 3100 BCE to 500 BCE

    The Alchemists

    The alchemists began examining the atomic theory about two centuries after the death of Aristotle. They used Aristotle’s idea about matter and began to create experiments and activities with them. By treating different metals and ores, the goal was to change the structure of the item so that it could become more valuable. Although the alchemists failed to turn common items into gold, they did create a scientific process which would allow for the eventual discovery of the atom.
  • 460 BCE

    Democritus

    Democritus
    Democritus
    Contribution to atomic theory. "By convention bitter, by convention sweet, but in reality atoms and void". Democritus said that everything is made up into tiny bits, which are called atoms. These atoms are indestructible. He said that different shapes of atoms gave them different properties. For example, he said that things that tasted sweet were made of round atoms.
  • 427 BCE

    Plato

    Plato
    Plato introduced the atomic theory in which ideal geometric forms serve as atoms, according to which atoms broke down mathematically into triangles, such that the form elements had the following shape: fire, air water, earth.
  • Robert Boyle

    Robert Boyle
    Boyle derived from experimental values, later known as Boyle's law that the volume of a gas varies inversely with pressure.
  • Antone Lavoisier

    Antone Lavoisier
    defined that matter was composed of atoms that were not created or destroyed during chemical reactions.
  • Billard Ball Model

    Billard Ball Model
    The Billard Ball Model was the first atomic model and was developed by John Dalton in the early 19th century. He hypothesized that an atom is a solid sphere that could not be divided into smaller particles. He came up with his theory as a result of his research into gases. He realized that certain gases only combined in specific proportions.
  • John Dalton

    John Dalton
    All matter is composed of extremely small particles called atoms. Atoms cannot be subdivided, created, or destroyed.
  • John Dalton

    John Dalton
    All matter is composed of extremely small particles called atoms. Atoms cannot be subdivided, created, or destroyed.
  • Amedeo Avogadro

    Amedeo Avogadro
    equal volumes of gases at the same temperature and pressure contain the same number of molecules regardless of their chemical nature and physical properties. This number is 6.023 X 1023.
  • Dmitri Mendeleev

    Dmitri Mendeleev
    Mendeleev found that, when all the known chemical elements were arranged in order of increasing atomic weight, the resulting table displayed a recurring pattern, or periodicity, of properties within groups of elements.
  • Plum Pudding Model

    Plum Pudding Model
    Plum Pudding
    The plum pudding model is one of several historical scientific models of the atom. First proposed by J. J. Thomson in 1904 soon after the discovery of the electron, but before the discovery of the atomic nucleus, the model tried to explain two properties of atoms then known: that electrons are negatively-charged particles and that atoms have no net electric charge
  • JJ Thompson

    JJ Thompson
    J.J. Thomson is credited with the discovery of the electron, the negatively charged particle in the atom. He is known for the Thomson atomic theory. Many scientists studied the electric discharge of a cathode ray tube. It was Thomson's interpretation that was important.
  • Pierre and Marie Curie

    Pierre and Marie Curie
    they suggested that the powerful rays, or energy, the polonium and radium gave off were actually particles from tiny atoms that were disintegrating inside the elements
  • Albert Einstein

    Albert Einstein
    Einstein's biggest contribution to the Atomic Theory was that he was able to fully prove through usage of evidence that atoms did indeed exist, and he was also able to demonstrate that electrons could leave metal through usage of light. He also created the mass energy equivalence equation, and this paved the way for the creation
  • Ernest Rutherford

    Ernest Rutherford
    Rutherford model, description of the structure of atoms proposed by the New Zealand-born physicist Ernest Rutherford. The model described the atom as a tiny, dense, positively charged core called a nucleus, around which the light, negative constituents, called electrons, circulate at some distance.
  • Robert Millikan

    Robert Millikan
    Millikan thought his cosmic ray photons were the "birth cries" of new atoms continually being created by God to interact entropy and prevent heat death. Robert Millikan was Vice Chairman of the National Research Council during World War I. During that time, he helped to develop anti-submarine and meteorological devices
  • solar system Model

    solar system Model
    Solar System models, especially mechanical models, called orreries, that illustrate the relative positions and motions of the planets and moons in the Solar System have been built for centuries. While they often showed relative sizes, these models were usually not built to scale. The enormous ratio of interplanetary distances to planetary diameters makes constructing a scale model of the Solar System a challenging task.
  • Neils Bohr

    Neils Bohr
    Niels Bohr proposed a model of the atom in which the electron was able to occupy only certain orbits around the nucleus. This atomic model was the first to use quantum theory, in that the electrons were limited to specific orbits around the nucleus. Bohr used his model to explain the spectral lines of hydrogen.
  • Henry G.J. Mosely

    Henry G.J. Mosely
    Henry Moseley, in full Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley, (born November 23, 1887, Weymouth, Dorset, England—died August 10, 1915, Gallipoli, Turkey, English physicist who experimentally demonstrated that the major properties of an element are determined by the atomic number, not by the atomic weight, and firmly established the relationship between atomic number and the charge of the atomic nucleus.
  • Werner Heinsenberg

    Werner Heinsenberg
    Werner Heisenberg contributed to atomic theory through formulating quantum mechanics in terms of matrices and in discovering the uncertainty principle, which states that a particle’s position and momentum cannot both be known exactly. The combined uncertainty in both measurements must be equal to or greater than h/(4π), where h is Planck’s constant.
  • Electron Cloud Model

    Electron Cloud Model
    The electron cloud model was developed in 1926 by Erwin Schrödinger and Werner Heisenberg. The model is a way to help visualize the most probable position of electrons in an atom. The electron cloud model is currently the accepted model of an atom.
  • Erwin Schrodinger

    Erwin Schrodinger
    theorized that the behavior of electrons within atoms could be explained by treating them mathematically as matter waves.
  • James Chadwich

    James Chadwich
    James Chadwick's contribution to the atomic model was his discovery of the neutron. The neutron is a neutrally charged subatomic particle that is about the same mass as the proton. Both protons and neutrons occupy the nucleus of the atom.