Math, asked by abhay4976, 1 year ago

how is Bohr's theory different from that of Rutherford's​

Answers

Answered by shradh36
0

Step-by-step explanation:

Rutherford knew the electrons were outside of the nucleus and they were equal in number to the "positiveness" of the nucleus. Rutherford randomly placed the negative electrons outside the nucleus.

Bohr's improvement of the Rutherford model was that Bohr placed the electrons in distinct energy levels. This Bohr model matched the experimental data that Max Planck had determined from his work on the different energies of photons.

If you will search Rutherford and Bohr models of the atom and narrow your search to images, you will find some of the models.

Answered by raji8115
0

Bohr's theory showed off the existence of stationary non radiating orbits, which accounted for the stability of atom . This was actually the major drawback for Rutherford's theory

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