By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero.

6
By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero

Transcript of By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero.

Page 1: By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero.

By:Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero

Page 2: By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero.

Rutherford was born on August 30th, 1871 in New Zealand.

He attended Canterbury college getting degrees in mathematics and physics.

He later attended Cambridge university as a research student under J.J. Thomson

Later he went to England to be a physics professor at Manchester university.

Eventually he started his own experiments working with radium and alpha rays.

Page 3: By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero.

Rutherford’s biggest contribution to anatomy of the atom was the discovery of the nucleus.

Ernest experimented with the structure of objects.

He fired alpha particles into pieces of gold. Studying the physics of the particles before and after contact gave him the information to prove there is a nucleus in atoms.

Page 4: By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero.

The experiment started with gold foil, he fired particles into it to study how they would react once they went through the gold

Some particles would go straight through others would reflect off at sometimes very large angles. However this did not happen often, in fact he predicted every 1 in 8000 particles were deflected.

With this he could say that most of atoms were composed of empty space but some were hitting a dense form of matter he called this the nucleus.

Page 5: By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero.

Clearly without the help of Ernest Rutherford we would know much less about the atom. If he hadn't created such a perfect experiment there might not have been the discovery of the nucleus at all everything would be considered to have tiny holes in them. Knowing there was something more than empty space in the atom led other scientists to believe there could be more to it.

Page 6: By: Brian Kober, Albert Lyou, and Charlie Romero.

http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1908/rutherford-bio.html

http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/meis/Rutherford.htm

http://www.rsc.org/chemsoc/timeline/pages/1911.html