Chemistry, asked by varnikhaashri25965, 5 months ago

state the observation of Rutherford's scattered experiment

Answers

Answered by Elsa1221
0

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.

Most of the fast moving α-particles passed straight through the gold foil. Most of the space inside the atom is empty. Some of the α-particles were deflected by the foil by small angles.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Observation And Conclusion Of Rutherford's Scattering Experiment. Most of the fast moving α-particles passed straight through the gold foil. Most of the space inside the atom is empty. Some of the α-particles were deflected by the foil by small angles.

Observations of Rutherford's scattering experiment:

Observations of Rutherford's scattering experiment: Most of the fast moving α-particles passed straight through the gold foil. Some of the α-particles were deflected by the foil by small angles. Surprisingly one out of every 12,000 alpha particles appeared to rebound.

Similar questions