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Developing models of atoms

Learn more on the history of the atom in this podcast.

Dalton鈥檚 model (1803)

John Dalton thought that all matter was made of tiny called , which he imagined as tiny solid balls. Dalton鈥檚 model included these ideas:

  • atoms cannot be broken down into anything simpler
  • the atoms of a given are identical to each other
  • the atoms of different elements are different from one another
  • during chemical reactions atoms rearrange to make different substances

Thomson鈥檚 model (1897)

J.J. Thomson discovered the . Atoms are neutral overall, so in Thomson鈥檚 鈥榩lum pudding model鈥:

  • atoms are spheres of positive charge
  • electrons are dotted around inside
Image of a plum pudding model, with a large blue circle with a positive symbol behind six red smaller circles with negative symbols.
Figure caption,
The plum pudding model

The Geiger-Marsden experiment (1909 - 1911)

Hans Geiger and Ernest Marsden tested the plum pudding model. They aimed beams of positively-charged particles at very thin gold foil. These particles should have passed straight through, according to the plum pudding model. However, many of them changed direction. Ernest Rutherford explained these results in his 鈥榩lanetary model鈥:

  • atoms have a central, positively charged with most of the mass
  • electrons orbit the nucleus, like planets around a star

Bohr鈥檚 model (1913)

Niels Bohr improved Rutherford鈥檚 model. Using mathematical ideas, he showed that electrons occupy shells or energy levels around the nucleus.

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