Science, asked by Anonymous, 7 months ago

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explain discovery of electron in detail​

Answers

Answered by kings07
4

Answer:

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{margin-top:auto}</p><p>10% {margin-top:-10px}</p><p>20% {margin-top:auto}</p><p>30% {margin-top:-10px}</p><p>40% {margin-top:auto}</p><p>100% {margin-top:auto}</p><p>}@keyframes shy {</p><p>0% {opacity:0}</p><p>10% {opacity:0.2}</p><p>90% {opacity:0.2}</p><p>100% {opacity:0}</p><p>}</p><p></p><p>@keyframes close-eye {</p><p>0% {</p><p>height: 40px;</p><p>margin-top: auto;</p><p>overflow: auto;</p><p>}</p><p>5% {</p><p>height: 2px;</p><p>margin-top: 20px;</p><p>overflow: hidden;</p><p>}</p><p>5.1% {</p><p>height: 40px;</p><p>margin-top:0;</p><p>overflow:visible;</p><p>}</p><p>}</p><p></p><p>&lt;/style&gt;</p><p>&lt;/body&gt;</p><p>&lt;/html&gt;The Electron was discovered in 1896, by the British physicist J. J. Thomson, using a cathode rays while doing discharge tube experiments. Thomson also determined e/m, ratio of the charge e to the mass m of the material particle which constituted these rays. ... These protons add the overall positive charge of an atom.

Answered by bhumikamangela040420
1

Answer:

Explanation:

  • In 1830, Michael Faraday showed that if electricity is passed through a solution of an electrolyte, chemical reactions occurred at the electrodes, which resulted in the liberation and deposition of matter at the electrodes.
  • In mid 1850s many scientists mainly Faraday began to study electrical discharge in partially evacuated tubes, known as cathode ray discharge tubes.
  • A cathode ray tube is made of glass containing two thin pieces of metal, called electrodes, sealed in it.
  • The electrical discharge through the gases could be observed only at very low pressures and at very high voltages.
  • The pressure of different gases could be adjusted by evacuation of the glass tubes.
  • When sufficiently high voltage is applied across the electrodes, current starts flowing through a stream of particles moving in the tube from the negative electrode (cathode) to the positive electrode (anode). These were called cathode rays or cathode ray particles.
  • The flow of current from cathode to anode was further checked by making a hole in the anode and coating the tube behind anode with phosphorescent material zinc sulphide.
  • When these rays, after passing through anode, strike the zinc sulphide coating, a bright spot is developed on the coating.

The results of these experiments are summarised below.

(i) The cathode rays start from cathode and move towards the anode.

(ii) These rays themselves are not visible but their behaviour can be observed with the help of certain kind of materials (fluorescent or phosphorescent) which glow when hit by them. Television picture tubes are cathode ray tubes and television pictures result due to fluorescence on the television screen coated with certain fluorescent or phosphorescent materials.

(iii) In the absence of electrical or magnetic field, these rays travel in straight lines.

(iv) In the presence of electrical or magnetic field, the behaviour of cathode rays are similar to that expected from negatively charged particles, suggesting that the cathode rays consist of negatively charged particles, called electrons.

(v) The characteristics of cathode rays (electrons) do not depend upon the material of electrodes and the nature of the gas present in the cathode ray tube.

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