historyoftheatom-130321122414-phpapp01
historyoftheatom-130321122414-phpapp01
historyoftheatom-130321122414-phpapp01
Democritus (465
BC)
• Ancient Greeks came to
believe all matter consisted of differing
amounts of only 4 basic substances: earth,
fire, water, and ether
• Leucippus, teacher of Democritus, proposed
matter was made of small particles
• D. was first to use the word atomos:
the smallest, indivisible part of matter
Back in the Iron Age….
• Some elements are found in nature in a
relatively pure form.
• Sulfur, copper, gold,
silver, and iron were
made into decorative
and useful objects.
The Alchemists (Dark Ages till
the Renaissance)
• Looked for the
philosophers stone
• thought they would
find a way to turn Pb
into Au
• Newton dabbled in
alchemy
The modern age begins
• Henning Brand of Germany discovered
phosphorus in 1669.
• He collected 50
buckets of urine,
fermented it, and
then boiled off the
water.
Joseph Priestley
• Discovers oxygen -1774
(at the same time as
Lavoisier & Scheel)
A “natural philosopher”
Also credited with
inventing soda water!
(1733-1804)
• Law of conservation of
Antoine Lavoisier mass
1743-1794 • Discovers nitrogen gas,
and that oxygen can be
chemically separated
from certain compounds
• confirms law of definite
proportions
• father of modern
chemistry
• loses his head to the
French Revolution
John Dalton
1766-1844
• Father of modern
Atomic Theory
• thought atoms of an
element were all
identical and
indivisible
• compounds are formed
from atoms of
different elements
Dalton’s model
William Prout
• Law of Definite
Proportions
1785-1850, a physician
Distilled HCl acid from
stomach juices, and
suggested that H is the
fundamental particle
Dimitri Mendeleev (1834-1907)
• Organizes the first
periodic table
• columns based on
valence (reactivity)
• position in a row based
(mostly ) on atomic
weight
• left places in table for
elements which were not
yet discovered
Mendeleev’s original table
Chemistry and Physics Join
Forces
The late 19th century through the 20thcentury
J J Thomson
1856-1940
• Discovers the electron
• Plum Pudding Model
of the atom….
• All the charged
particles were
randomly scattered
like “plums in
pudding”
• did not know about
neutrons
• Nobel Prize 1906.
Thompson's experiment to discover electrons (1897)
Thomson’s model
Wilhelm Roentgen
1845-1923
Pierre Marie
•Investigated X-rays
•Got skin damage while
experimenting
Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937)
• Electrons are separated
from the nucleus
• nucleus has positive
charge and the shells are
negative
• atoms are mostly empty
space (1911) - the
Gold foil experiment
• Planetary model
Rutherford’s “planetary” model
Henry Mosley (1887-1915)
• Discovers the atomic
number
• corrects Mendeleev’s
periodic table, basing
it on Atomic Number
• dead in his 20’s
….WWI
Los Alamos National Lab
+1
+2 +3
Relationships on the Periodic
Table
Max Planck
1858-1947
the energy of an
orbiting electron is
determined by the
frequency of its wave
Simply because the act of observing affects the behavior of the observed.
I’m sure you’re aware of some things that change their behavior
depending on how they are being observed, for example:
In the case of particles, the observer also affects the behavior of
the observed. There are limits to how much we can know about a
particle at any given moment. Take this picture for example:
Right now we can see the left side clearly.
E = mc2
Einstein didn’t like Quantum
Mechanics
• Einstein to Bohr, “God
does not play dice
with the universe”
• Bohr, in response,
“Who are you to be
telling God what to
do?”
Paul Dirac
Worked on Uranium
enrichment during WW II
James Chadwick
1891-1974
• 1932 discovers the
neutron
• Explains isotopes
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1935/chadwick-bio.html
Lise Meitner
1878-1968