A4atom

The history and development of the atom

  • 300

    Aristotle

    Aristotle
    Around 300BC Aristotle didn’t believe that atoms were of different sizes and had regular geometric shapes which contradicted societies belief for his day. He believed all matter contained fire, air, earth, and water and emotions of the world contributed to good and bad.
  • 430

    Democritus

    Democritus
    Around 430BC Democritus made very significant observation for his lifetime he stated that atoms are the building blocks for all things and that atoms are tiny, indivisible, and differ only by shape and arrangement. He also stated that atoms cannot be destroyed and that atoms correspond to the substance that they make.
  • Antoine Lavoisier

    Antoine Lavoisier
    In 1778 Lavoisier did many experiments with gases, he basically discovered oxygen and hydrogen and their names stuck. When some substances were burned he stated that their loss in mass was gas molecules escaping into the atmosphere which led him to establish the Law of Conservation of Mass.
  • John Dalton

    John Dalton
    In1803 after many years of researching atoms John Dalton published his Theory on atoms which stated; All elements are made up of tiny indivisible particles, known as atoms, Atoms of the same element are identical with respect to their weights . Atoms of different elements are different from each other and can be identified by their relative weights. Atoms can neither be divided into smaller particles nor destroyed He also expanded upon the idea of definite proportions and the Law of Multiple
  • Marie & Pierre Curie

    Marie & Pierre Curie
    Marie & Pierre Curie discovered two new elements and did vast research on radioactivity in 1896. Which helped shape the understanding of radioactive atoms and their unique properties.
  • Henri Becquerel

    Henri Becquerel
    Henri was experimenting with an ore containing uranium in his lab and found on accident that if he left it on a photographic plate without any light the ore still left an image. That happened because uranium is radioactive and that was the first time it was documented as such.
  • JJ Thomson

    JJ Thomson
    In 1897 scientist JJ Thompson created a tube with a positively charged anode side and a negatively charged cathode side which made sort of a beam then he placed a magnet in the middle and the beam bended toward the positive end of the magnet meaning the particles in the beam were negatively charged thus electrons.
  • Max Planck

    Max Planck
    In Dec. of 1900 Planck discovered that electromagnetic energy is released in quantized specific amounts. In the formula to find the amount of energy that is released when electrons jump energy levels, h is plancks constant
  • Ernest Rutherford

    Ernest Rutherford
    Ernest Rutherford did his famous gold foil experiment in 1908. He shot alpha particles at gold foil, most of them went right through the foil but some were reflected meaning there was a small, dense, positive charged area he called it a nucleus of an atom.
  • Robert Millikan

    Robert Millikan
    In 1909 Robert Millikan with his oil-drop experiment figured out that the mass of an electron was very small and that the overall charge of an atom is neutral.
  • Henry Moseley

    Henry Moseley
    Moseley discovered a way to use X-rays to study the sturcture of atoms. He used this to make the Periodic Table mor accurate. He was a student of Ruherford
  • Niels Bohr

    Niels Bohr
    Niels Bohr expanded upon his teacher Ernst Rutherford’s idea in 1913 Bohr stated that electrons stay in “clouds” and the farther away you get from the nucleus the more electrons these clouds can hold and the outer ones are what distinguishes the atoms chemical properties and when electrons jump form an outer orbit to an inner one light is emitted.
  • Werner Heisenberg

    Werner Heisenberg
    Heisenberg created the uncertainty principle in 1925 that states the more precisely the position of a particle is determined, the less precisely the momentum is known in this instant, and vice versa.
  • Erwin Schrodinger

    Erwin Schrodinger
    In 1926 the Austrian physicist, Erwin Schrödinger had an interesting idea: Why not go all the way with particle waves and try to form a model of the atom on that basis? His theory worked kind of like harmonic theory for a violin string except that the vibrations traveled in circles. The world of the atom, indeed, began to appear very strange. It proved difficult to form an accurate picture of an atom because nothing in our world really compares with it.
  • James Chadwick

    James Chadwick
    In 1932 James Chadwick discovered a new subatomic particle that he named the neutron. They have no charge and their function is to stabilize the nucleus of an atom by allowing protons to be close to one another. He discovered them by observing when Beryllium was hit with alpha particles it emitted a strange light and the substance that was emitting the light had no charge.