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History of Atoms make up everything

History of Atoms make up everything. Atoms. Are the smallest particles into which an element can be divided and will remain the same substance Make up elements (which combine to form compounds) often called the building blocks of matter. Atoms.

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History of Atoms make up everything

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  1. History of Atomsmake up everything

  2. Atoms.... • Are the smallest particles into which an element can be divided and will remain the same substance • Make up elements • (which combine to form compounds) • often called the building blocks of matter

  3. Atoms.... • Were not seen prior to 1981 when the scanning tunneling microscope was invented • comes from the Greek word atomos, meaning indivisible However… The atomic theory has been around for more than 2000 years!

  4. Reminder.... A Theory is.... • an explanation for a broad range of hypotheses and observations that have been supported by testing

  5. The History of the Atom • Starting in Greece with Democritus The History of the Atom

  6. Democritus Proposed(around 440BC) • that if a person continued to cut a coin in half over and over again, they would eventually end up with an uncuttable piece • the name for the atom • all atoms are small hard particles made form a variety of shapes and sizes • all atoms are moving and made from different materials joining together

  7. Aristotle disagrees(around 300BC) • Stating particles could be divided indefinitely Its All Greek To Me!

  8. Meet Aristotle & Democritus

  9. Next stop....... • Great Britain for the Atomic Theory

  10. Pop Question??? What are combined elements with constant mass ratio called? (hint from chapter 4) COMPOUNDS!!

  11. Dalton States(around 1700s) • Atomic Theory: • All substances are made of atoms. Atoms are small particles that cannot be created, divided, or destroyed • Atoms of the same element are exactly alike, and atoms of different elements are different • Atoms join with other atoms to make new substances

  12. Meet Dalton

  13. Thomson Discovers • discovered that there were small particles inside the atom, therefore, the atom could be divided into smaller parts!

  14. Thompson Experimented

  15. Cathode-ray tube

  16. Thompson concluded... • The beam was made of particles with a negative electric charge • Which Thompson called corpuscles and led him to believe… • that corpuscles are present in every type of atom • all corpuscles are identical

  17. Thompson concluded... • revises atomic theory to account for the presence of electrons (the negatively charged corpuscles or particles he found in his experiment) • also figures out that since an atom has no charge overall, there must be something with a positive charge within the atom to balance the charges. • This model became known as the plum pudding model because it looked like a popular dessert at the time. We might call it the chocolate chip ice cream model today!

  18. Thompson’s model

  19. Rutherford changes theory • Comes up with his own model of the atom after the gold foil experiment

  20. Meet Rutherford

  21. Bohr suggests... (Who worked with Rutherford) • suggested that electrons travel around the nucleus in definite paths • that the electrons could jump between paths

  22. Jumping Electrons

  23. Current Theory • The exact movement of an electron cannot be predicted but, according to current theory, there are regions of the atom where the electrons are more likely to be found. These are called electron clouds.

  24. Current Theory

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