Science timeline

  • Period: 460 BCE to 370 BCE

    Democritus

    Democritus was the first philosopher to theorise about the atom. In the year 442 BCE, he hypothesised that if you take an object and cut it into smaller and smaller pieces, eventually you would reach a point where you could no longer cut it anymore.
  • Period: 384 BCE to 322 BCE

    Aristotle

    Aristotle rejected the ideas of Democritus, instead believing that matter on Earth was made up of four elements – earth, air, fire and water – and the amounts of these elements determined how materials behaved.
  • Period: to

    John Dalton

    Dalton is credited for initiating research into modern atomic theory in 1803, more than 2000 years after Democritus first proposed his ideas on the atom. Dalton suggested that all elements, which were now arranged in the periodic table, contained atoms, and that atoms of the same element would be identical in size, shape and mass.
  • Period: to

    Joseph John Thomson

    Thomson was the first scientist to discover particles smaller than the atom, disproving Dalton’s and Democritus’s theories. Surprisingly, the first subatomic particle to be discovered was the lightest – the electron – and Thomson won a Nobel Prize for his work in 1906. By studying ‘rays’ within a cathode ray tube, Thomson was able to determine that these ‘rays’ had a mass 1000 times smaller than a hydrogen atom, the lightest piece of matter known to science at the time.
  • Period: to

    Ernest Rutherford

    Rutherford predicted that if the atom was like Thomson’s plum pudding model, then all the alpha particles should pass straight through the atom undisturbed. This is not what happened! It was true that almost all (99.99%) of the alpha particles passed straight through the foil and were detected at the other side, indicating that the atom was mainly empty space.