QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- both democritus and dalton proposed that matter consists of atoms. explain how their approaches to reaching the same conclusion differed.
- describe the experiment that led to the discovery of the electron.
- describe rutherford’s gold foil experiment. what did this experiment tell us about the structure of the atom?
- what are the 3 subatomic particles? describe the differences between them in their masses, charges, and place within the atom.
- since all atoms have negatively charged electrons, shouldn’t every atom have a negative charge? explain.
Question 5: Describe the experiment that led to the discovery of the electron.
J.J. Thomson conducted the cathode - ray tube experiment. A cathode - ray tube has a cathode (negative electrode) and an anode (positive electrode) in a vacuum - sealed tube. When a high voltage was applied, a ray (cathode ray) was emitted from the cathode. Thomson observed that these rays were deflected by electric and magnetic fields. The direction of deflection showed that the rays were composed of negatively charged particles. He also calculated the charge - to - mass ratio ($\frac{e}{m}$) of these particles, which were later named electrons.
- Experiment Description: Rutherford directed a beam of alpha ($\alpha$) particles (positively charged, from radioactive decay) at a thin gold foil. A fluorescent screen around the foil detected the scattered $\alpha$ - particles.
- Results and Atomic Structure Insight: Most $\alpha$ - particles passed through the foil (atom mostly empty space). Some were deflected at small angles, and a few (about 1 in 8000) were deflected at large angles (even back towards the source). This showed a small, dense, positively charged nucleus at the center of the atom (the large - angle deflections were due to $\alpha$ - particles hitting this nucleus), with electrons orbiting around it in the empty space.
The three subatomic particles are protons, neutrons, and electrons.
- Protons: Mass $\approx 1.67\times10^{-27}\text{ kg}$ (or 1 atomic mass unit, amu), charge $+1e$ ($e = 1.6\times10^{-19}\text{ C}$), located in the nucleus.
- Neutrons: Mass $\approx 1.67\times10^{-27}\text{ kg}$ (1 amu), charge $0$, located in the nucleus.
- Electrons: Mass $\approx 9.11\times10^{-31}\text{ kg}$ (negligible compared to proton/neutron), charge $- 1e$, located in electron cloud (around the nucleus).
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
J.J. Thomson's cathode - ray tube experiment: A high voltage was applied across electrodes in a vacuum tube. The emitted cathode rays (deflected by electric/magnetic fields, showing negative charge) led to electron discovery, with $\boldsymbol{\frac{e}{m}}$ calculated.