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- Date sent: Sun, 28 Apr 1996 03:03:41 -0400
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- Yazan Fahmawi Sept. 30, 1995
- T3 IBS Chemistry
- Ms. Redman
- Historical Development of
- Atomic Structure
- The idea behind the "atom" goes back to the Ancient Greek society, where scientists
- believed that all matter was made of smaller, more fundamental particles called elements.
- They called these particles atoms, meaning "not divisible." Then came the chemists and
- physicists of the 16th and 17th centuries who discovered various formulae of various salts
- and water, hence discovering the idea of a molecule.
-
- Then, in 1766 was born a man named John Dalton born in England. He is known as the father
- of atomic theory because he is the one who made it quantitative, meaning he discovered
- many masses of various elements and, in relation, discovered the different proportions
- which molecules are formed in (i.e. for every water molecule, one atom of oxygen and two
- molecules of hydrogen are needed). He also discovered the noble, or inert gases, and their
- failure to react with other substances. In 1869 a Russian chemist, best known for his
- development of the periodic law of the properties of the chemical elements (which states
- that elements show a regular pattern ("periodicity") when they are arranged according to
- their atomic masses), published his first attempt to classify the known elements. His name
- was Mendeleyev, and he was a renowned teacher. Because no good textbook in chemistry was
- available at the time, he wrote the two-volume Principles of Chemistry (1868-1870), which
- later became a classic. During the writing of this book, Mendeleyev tried to classify the
- elements according to their chemical properties. In 1871 he published an improved version
- of the periodic table, in which he left gaps for elements that were not yet known. His
- chart and theories gained acceptance by the scientific world when three elements he
- "predicted"ùgallium, germanium, and scandiumùwere subsequently discovered In 1856 another
- important figure in atomic theory was born: Sir Joseph John Thomson. In 1906, after
- teaching at the University of Cambridge and Trinity University in England, he won the
- Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the conduction of electricity through gases. He
- discovered what an electron is using cathode rays. An electron is the smallest particle in
- an atom, whose mass is negligible compared to the rest of the atom, and whose charge is
- negative. Though scientists did not know it at the time, electrons were located in an
- electron cloud rotating around the nucleus, or center of the atom.
-
- Another prominent figure in nuclear physics is a man called Ernest Rutherford, born in
- 1871. He also was a professor at the University of Cambridge, the University of Manchester
- (both of which are in England), and at McGill College in Montreal, Canada. His importance
- comes after the discovery of radioactivity in 1896 by a French scientist named Becquerel.
- Rutherford identified the three main components of radioactivity: alpha, beta, and gamma
- particles. He also found the alpha particle to be a positively charged helium atom. Also,
- Rutherford was the first one to discover the true structure of an atom, it having a
- central, heavy nucleus with an electron cloud surrounding it. It was Rutherford that,
- through experiments such as passing alpha particles through a thin gold foil and watching
- some repel, discovered the second constituent of the atom (also the first component of the
- nucleus): the proton. The proton has a relative atomic mass of one and has a positive
- charge. Rutherford also went down in history as the first man to artificially cause a
- nuclear reaction when, in 1919, he bombarded nitrogen gas with radioactive alpha
- particles, which resulted in atoms of an oxygen isotope and protons. A unit of
- radioactivity, the rutherford, was named in his honor. A colleague of Rutherford's at
- Cambridge University was a man named James Chadwick discovered the third fundamental
- particle that makes up the atom: the neutron. This discovery led immediately to the
- discovery of nuclear fission and the atom bomb The neutron has a relative atomic mass of
- one, and has no positive or negative charge (i.e. it is neutral). It is found in the
- nucleus of atoms, along with the proton. Chadwick was one of the first British
- scientists to stress the development of a possible atom bomb. His name was strongly
- associated with the British atomic bomb effort, especially during World War II. During the
- last two years of W.W.II (1943-1945) Chadwick moved to New Mexico, where he spent much of
- his time researching at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, a site chosen by the US
- government for nuclear weapon research. The first atomic bomb was developed here with the
- help of James Chadwick. Chadwick earned the Nobel Prize for physics in 1935. In the same
- era of the development of the atom lived a man, just across the North Sea from these three
- learned individuals, in Denmark. Neils Henrik Bohr, born in 1885, was also a considerable
- man when it came to nuclear and atomic physics. He moved to Cambridge University in 1911,
- working under J. J. Thomson, but soon moved to Manchester to work under Rutherford's
- supervision. He won the Nobel Prize in physics in 1922 for his theory on atomic structure
- (also known as the Quantum Theory), which was published in papers between 1913 and 1915.
- He based his work around Rutherford's conception of the atom. This theory, that suggests
- that electrons only emit electromagnetic energy when they jump from one quantum level to
- another, contributed tremendously to future developing of theoretical atomic physics. His
- work helped lead to the notion that electrons exist in shells and that the electrons in
- the outermost shell certify an atom's chemical properties. He later illustrated that
- uranium-235 is the singular isotope of uranium that undergoes nuclear fission. The Bohrs
- moved to England, and then to the US, where Bohr went to work for the government at Los
- Alamos, New Mexico, along with James Chadwick, until the first bomb's detonation in 1945.
- He disapproved complete secrecy of the nuclear bomb, and believed that its consequences
- would revolutionize the modern world. He wanted some sorts of international law to watch
- over the use of nuclear devices. In 1945 Bohr returned to the University of Copenhagen in
- Denmark, where he began developing peaceful uses for atomic energy, such as power plants
- using nuclear resources as opposed to fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gases.
- Bohr died in Copenhagen on November 18, 1962. In Austria in 1887 a man by the name of
- Erwin Schr÷dinger was born. He became a physicist best known for his mathematical studies
- of the wave mechanics of orbiting electrons. His most famous and important contribution to
- the understanding of atomic structure is a meticulous and precise mathematical description
- of the standing waves orbiting electrons follow. His theory was published in 1926, and
- along with a German physicist's theory of matrix mechanics, their theories became the
- basis of quantum mechanics. Schr÷dinger shared the 1933 Nobel Prize in physics with the
- British physicist Paul A. M. Dirac for his contribution to the development of quantum
- mechanics. Through the centuries that have passed, minds have been boggled, countless
- questions have been answered, and many great minds conceived, however, there is no doubt
- that there is still much to discover about the atom, such as sub-atomic, elementary
- particles.
- A whole new generation of great scientists is still to come, to explore and unlock the
- universe's secrets.
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