Discovery of Sub Atomic Particles

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Discovery of protons, neutrons, and electrons.

Protons
Who is discovered the protons?
The discovery of the proton is credited to Ernest Rutherford, who is also credited with discovery of
the atomic nucleus.

How?

 Ernest Rutherford observed that his scintillation (the flash of light that is produced by a
transparent material with the passage of a sub atomic particle) detectors detected hydrogen nuclei
when a beam of alpha particles was shot into the air.
 After investigating further, Rutherford found that these hydrogen nuclei were produced from the
nitrogen atoms present in the atmosphere.
 He then proceeded to fire beams of alpha particles into pure nitrogen gas and observed that a
greater number of hydrogen nuclei were produced.
 He concluded that the hydrogen nuclei originated from the nitrogen atom, proving that the
hydrogen nucleus was a part of all other atoms.
 This experiment was the first to report a nuclear reaction, given by the equation: 14N + α → 17O +
p [Where α is an alpha particle which contains two protons and two neutrons, and ‘p’ is a proton]
 The hydrogen nucleus was later named ‘proton’ and recognized as one of the building blocks of
the atomic nucleus.
Neutrons
The discovery of neutrons can be traced back to the year 1930 when the German nuclear
physicists Herbert Becker and Walther Bothe observed that a penetrating form of radiation
was produced when the alpha particles emitted by polonium was incident on relatively light
elements such as lithium, beryllium, and boron. This penetrating radiation was unaffected by
electric fields and was, therefore, assumed to be gamma radiation.

In the year 1932, the French scientists Frederic Joliot-Curie and Irene Joliot-Curie observed
that this unusually penetrating radiation, when incident on paraffin wax (or other compounds
rich in hydrogen), caused the ejection of high energy protons (~5 MeV). The Italian physicist
Ettore Majorana suggested the existence of a neutral particle in the nucleus of the atom which
was responsible for the manner in which the radiation interacted with protons.

The British physicist Sir James Chadwick discovered neutrons in the year 1932.

He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in the year 1935 for this discovery

How?
 James Chadwick fired alpha radiation at beryllium sheet from a polonium source. This led to the
production of an uncharged, penetrating radiation.
 This radiation was made incident on paraffin wax, a hydrocarbon having a relatively high
hydrogen content.
 The protons ejected from the paraffin wax (when struck by the uncharged radiation) were
observed with the help of an ionization chamber.
 The range of the liberated protons was measured and the interaction between the uncharged
radiation and the atoms of several gases was studied by Chadwick.
 He concluded that the unusually penetrating radiation consisted of uncharged particles having
(approximately) the same mass as a proton. These particles were later termed ‘neutrons
(oscillograph = a device for recording oscillations especially that of an electric current.)

ELECTRONS
Cathode-ray studies began in 1854 when Heinrich Geissler, a glassblower and technical
assistant to German physicist Julius Plücker, improved the vacuum tube. Plücker discovered
cathode rays in 1858 by sealing two electrodes inside the tube, evacuating the air, and
forcing electric current between the electrodes. He found a green glow on the wall of his
glass tube and attributed it to rays emanating from the cathode. In 1869, with better vacuums,
Plücker’s pupil Johann W. Hittorf saw a shadow cast by an object placed in front of the
cathode. The shadow proved that the cathode rays originated from the cathode. English
physicist and chemist William Crookes investigated cathode rays in 1879 and found that they
were bent by a magnetic field; the direction of deflection suggested that they were negatively
charged particles. As the luminescence did not depend on what gas had been in the vacuum
or what metal the electrodes were made of, he surmised that the rays were a property of the
electric current itself. As a result of Crookes’s work, cathode rays were widely studied, and
the tubes came to be called Crookes tubes.

Heinrich Hertz, the German physicist, reported that the cathode rays were not deflected when
they passed between two oppositely charged plates in an 1892 experiment. 

In England J.J. Thomson thought Hertz’s vacuum might have been faulty and
that residual gas might have reduced the effect of the electric field on the cathode rays.

Thomson repeated Hertz’s experiment with a better vacuum in 1897. He directed the cathode
rays between two parallel aluminium plates to the end of a tube where they were observed as
luminescence on the glass. When the top aluminium plate was negative, the rays moved
down; when the upper plate was positive, the rays moved up. The deflection was proportional
to the difference in potential between the plates. With both magnetic and electric deflections
observed, it was clear that cathode rays were negatively charged particles. Thomson’s
discovery established the particulate nature of electricity. Accordingly, he called these
particles electrons.

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