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Question
the modern model of the atom describes electrons in a little less specific detail than earlier models did. why is it that being less sure about the placement of electrons in an atom is actually an improvement over earlier models?
○ electrons do not follow specific paths, so describing the area where an electron is likely to be is more scientifically accurate.
○ electrons were thought to be negatively charged, but now scientists know that their charge depends on their energy level.
○ the modern model is based on mathematical equations, so the results become less clear when the decimals are rounded.
○ the position of electrons in atomic models has changed so much that it is better to have a less specific model than to be wrong again.
- Analyze Option 1: Electrons don't follow fixed paths (quantum mechanics shows electron location is probabilistic, described by orbitals - regions of high probability). So describing the likely area is more accurate than earlier models (like Bohr's fixed orbits) which were incorrect about electron paths.
- Analyze Option 2: Electrons are always negatively charged; their charge doesn't depend on energy level. So this is incorrect.
- Analyze Option 3: The modern atomic model's improvement isn't about decimal rounding in math equations. The key is the nature of electron motion, not math precision issues. So this is incorrect.
- Analyze Option 4: The modern model is an improvement due to scientific accuracy (understanding electron behavior), not just to avoid being wrong. The reasoning here is flawed.
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A. Electrons do not follow specific paths, so describing the area where an electron is likely to be is more scientifically accurate.