Chemistry, asked by ashmitvai, 5 months ago

observations and defects of rutherfordatomic structure

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Answered by Anonymous
1

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Thomson's plum pudding model of the atom had negatively-charged electrons embedded within a positively-charged "soup." Rutherford's gold foil experiment showed that the atom is mostly empty space with a tiny, dense, positively-charged nucleus. Based on these results, Rutherford proposed the nuclear model of the atom.

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This atomic model failed to explain stability of atoms. According to the model, electrons revolve around the positively charged nucleus. It's not possible for a long run as we know atoms are stable while any particle in a circular orbit would undergo acceleration.

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Answered by singh1647
1

Answer:

Rutherford atomic model failed to explain about the stability of electrons in a circular path. As per Rutherford's model, electrons revolve around the nucleus in a circular path. ... Eventually, electrons should lose energy and fall into the nucleus. And this points to the instability of the atom.

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