Science, asked by nayanmanocha6093, 10 months ago

Who gave the term nucleous



Answers

Answered by aaravshrivastwa
1
In Chemistry, Rutherford bombarded the alpha particles on a thin gold foil. He observed that some particles got back to their original path when they crashed on the centre of the Gold atom. Then he thought that there is a highly positive charge is present in the centre and also observed that there was a hard substance in the centre. He called it Nucleus and In Nucleus both positive and neutral particles were present so he called it Nucleous.
Answered by ladida
0

Robert Brown

The nucleus was also described by Franz Bauer in 1804 and in more detail in 1831 by Scottish botanist Robert Brown in a talk at the Linnean Society of London. Brown was studying orchids under microscope when he observed an opaque area, which he called the "areola" or "nucleus", in the cells of the flower's outer layer.

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