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yes. the purple plums are edible and any other plums
Since the Atkins Diet is low carb, the food list does not include any fruits in Phase I, and this would include plum. In Phase II some fruits and juices are allowed, but not plums. However, Phase III will allow 1 small plum with a net carb of 3.3.
The plum is one of those fruits that perform best when there is another variety nearby for cross-pollination. Otherwise, the tree will either have no fruit or fruit that is small and bitter. Also, keep in mind that there are "flowering plums" that are grown only for their spring beauty and do not produce any fruit.
In Thomson's "Plum Pudding Model" each atom was a sphere filled with a positively charged fluid. The fluid was called the "pudding." Scattered in this fluid were electrons known as the "plums." The radius of the model was 10-10 meters. Thomson suggested that the positive fluid held the negative charges, the electrons, in the atom because of electrical forces. However, this was only a very vague explanation and failed to provide any definite answers.
A prune is any of various plum species. Prunes are usually sold as dried fruit. Fresh plums sold as prunes have an oval shape and dried prunes are wrinkly on the outside and chewy in the center. A prune is a dried plum and is a fruit not a berry.
Before we state the results of the Rutherford gold foil experiment based on the correctness of the Thomson plum pudding model, let's back up and review just a bit. Atoms were thought to be made up of electrons distributed in a positive "matrix" of sorts. With the electrons "evenly distributed" throughout the volume of the atom, a parallel or comparison was made to plum pudding. The plums, which were "scattered" throughout the pudding, were thought of as the electrons in the atom. This is the basis for the plum pudding model of the atom. The gold foil experiment that Rutherford proposed was set up, and alpha particles were "fired" at gold foil from an alpha source (alpha emitter). As the alpha particles were known to be massive compared to an electron, an experiment on atoms conforming to the plum pudding model of the atom would show that the alpha particles zip right through. There would be nothing anywhere near as massive as an alpha particle in the plum pudding atom to stop or scatter them. All the alpha particles would strike the target screen behind the foil in a direct line from the source. When the experiment was actually conducted, most of the alpha particles struck as expected. But a few were scattered in different directions, and this was "impossible" if the atom was constructed as suggested by the plum pudding model. What internal structure in the plum pudding atom could possibly deflect (scatter) a few (or any!) alpha particles? The plum pudding model was set aside, and Rutherford's suggestion was that most of the mass of the atom was concentrated as a positive charge in the center in what we call a nucleus.
A Description of electrons scattered inside the atom
Barbecue chicken wings, any type of vegetables, fruits, pudding, and french fries.
I don't think the original Nursery Rhyme counts the number of plums. On the lighter side....... I don't think he pulled out any plums. Little Jack Horner sat in a corner eating his Christmas Pie, he put in his thumb and instead of a plum, he squirted juice in his eye.
Most fruits are safe for diabetics. You can still eat bananas, apples, strawberries, blueberries and melons. Stay away from plums, however, because they have alot of sugar.
The principal conclusion was that any chemical element has a positive charged central nucleus.
Plums, of course. Any fruit juice is mostly water and sugars, with relatively small amounts of other compounds such as carboxylic acids and esters. An exact "recipe" for plum juice is impossible, since many of the compounds are present only in trace amounts, and the relative proportions can vary considerably in any case.