RUTHERFORD'S MODEL OF AN ATOM
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The Rutherford model was devised by the New Zealand-born physicist Ernest Rutherford to describe an atom. Rutherford directed the Geiger–Marsden experiment in 1909, which suggested, upon Rutherford's 1911 analysis, that J. J. Thomson's plum pudding model of the atom was incorrect.
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According to the Rutherford atomic model:
The positively charged particles and most of the mass of an atom was concentrated in an extremely small volume inside the nucleus. Rutherford model proposed that the negatively charged electrons surround the nucleus of an atom and revolve around nucleus.
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