Chemistry, asked by nazniparveen2581, 8 months ago

Rutherford's model differs from Bohr's model?

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Answered by saurabh363590
2

Answer:

Rutherford randomly placed the negative electrons outside the nucleus. ... Rutherford described the atom as consisting of a tiny positive mass surrounded by a cloud of negative electrons. Bohr thought that electrons orbited the nucleus in quantised orbits. Bohr built upon Rutherford's model of the atom.

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Answered by Niharikamishra24
2

Question:-

Rutherford's model differs from Bohr's model?

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Rutherford proposed that most of the atom was empty space with the mass and positive charge concentrated in a tiny nucleus. Electrons would orbit the nucleus similar to how planets orbit the sun.

However, Rutherford's model did not explain why the negative orbiting electron did not lose energy and be pulled into the positive nucleus.

And

Bohr proposed an atomic model based on quantum theory where electrons moved around the nucleus in definite orbits.

If the electron absorbs a quantum of energy, it moves to an orbit with a higher energy level. It then becomes excited and emits energy to return to its stable orbit.

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