Physics, asked by rohitkumarmandal18, 1 year ago

Alpha- particle scattering and Rutherford's atomic model.

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Answered by Anonymous
2
In 1911, Rutherford, along with his assistants, H. Geiger and E. Marsden, performed the Alpha Particle scattering experiment, which led to the birth of the ‘nuclear model of an atom’ – a major step towards how we see the atom today.
Answered by Anonymous
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<b><u><huge> .  Rutherford overturned Thomson's model in 1911 with his well-known gold foil experimentin which he demonstrated that the atom has a tiny and heavy nucleus.  Rutherford designed an experiment to use the alpha particles emitted by a radioactive element as probes to the unseen world of atomic structure.The model described the atom as a tiny, dense, positively charged core called a nucleus, in which nearly all the mass is concentrated around which the light negative constituents called electrons.><u><huge>

Anonymous: :-)
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