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Continuing the Atomic Theory

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Presentation on theme: "Continuing the Atomic Theory"— Presentation transcript:

1 Continuing the Atomic Theory

2 Rutherford’s Model (1911) fired protons at a sheet of gold foil most went through unaffected, some bounced away there is a small dense area of positive particles at the center of the atom- the nucleus electrons are scattered near the outside of the atom with mostly empty space between the nucleus and the electrons

3 Gold Foil Experiment Gold foil Radioactive source

4 Rutherford’s Model Empty Space nucleus (small dense positive area)
electrons

5 Ernest Rutherford

6 Bohr Model (1913) electrons move in definite orbits around the nucleus
these orbits or energy levels are located at certain distances from the nucleus

7 Bohr’s Model nucleus Electrons

8 Neils Bohr

9 Wave Model (present day)
based on complex math equations orbits are more complex than originally thought de Broglie stated that electrons (particles) have wave properties, and he viewed these as standing waves, like those produce when a guitar string is plucked (classical physics.) Schrodinger assumed that the electron in Hydrogen behaves as a standing wave.

10 Wave Model (continued)
When Schrodinger’s equation is analyzed, many solutions are found. Each solution represents an atomic orbital. An atomic orbital is the most probable location for finding an electron.

11 What is an orbital? It is not a Bohr orbit (not moving in a circular path) How is the electron moving? We don’t know! There is a fundamental limitation to just how precisely we can know both the position and momentum of a particle at a given time

12 This is kind of how we assume an electron travels

13 Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
The more accurately we know the particle’s position, the less accurately we can know its momentum and vice versa. We can’t know the exact motion of the electron around the nucleus. The area that an electron orbits is called an “electron cloud”

14 Louis de Broglie Erwin Schrodinger

15 Werner Heisenberg


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