Science, asked by chrupendrasingh, 5 months ago

What was Thomason's model of an Atom, write anyone
observation of Rutherford's model ofan atom

Answers

Answered by sahiljoshi07072004
0

Explanation:

Most of this planetary atom was open space and offered no resistance to the passage of the alpha particles. The Rutherford model supplanted the “plum-pudding” atomic model of English physicist Sir J.J. Thomson, in which the electrons were embedded in a positively charged atom like plums in a pudding.

Answered by rushikanomula26
0

Answer:

In 1904, Thomson proposed atomic model where electrons are embedded within spherically distributed, positive charge (so-called "plum pudding" model). Both the positive charge and the mass of the atom would be more or less uniformly distributed over its size.

Rutherford's Nuclear Model Of Atom

There is a positively charged center in an atom called the nucleus. Nearly all the mass of an atom resides in the nucleus. The electrons revolve around the nucleus in well-defined orbits. The size of the nucleus is very small as compared to the size of the atom

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