Want this question answered?
The Ernest Rutherford's atomic method describes the atom as a tiny, dense, and positively charged core. The nucleus has concentrated mass around which the negative constituents, called electrons, circulate at some distance.
because for the charge doesn't diffused
Brilliant experimental physicist and one of the founders of nuclear physics
he made so many things that we use today.
The tesla coil was invented in 1891 and is still being used today.
Ernest Rutherford was a physicist, whose expertise was the atom. He developed the model we use to understand the atom, converted one element into another, and explained radioactivity as the disintegration of atoms (for which he won the Nobel Prize).
they made the numbers we use today and they were the onlu ones that made zero and they made our decimal system.
he used a particle emitter, gold foil and a detecting screen made from zinc sulphide
Hans Geiger, along with Ernest Rutherford, invented the Geiger counter, which is a detector for ionizing radiation. Use the links below for more information.
The Ernest Rutherford's atomic method describes the atom as a tiny, dense, and positively charged core. The nucleus has concentrated mass around which the negative constituents, called electrons, circulate at some distance.
You could use Rutherford Car Service or get an Uber.
The term goes back a ways- scientifically, to a man named Democritus, he thought of the term we use today (atom), though it is spelled different in his native language of Greek. John Dalton had his own theory on atoms, though the first model was developed by J.J Thompson. The way I remember it is to think of choclate-chip ice cream. He proposed there being one large particle with smaller negative particles throughout. Often, it is referred to as the plum pudding model. Next was a man named Ernest Rutherford, who furthered the discovery of atoms in his gold foil experiment. Niels Bohr, who I believe knew Rutherford, made the model of orbitral rings. Our technology, especially in the mid and late 1900's has allowed us to complete this model accurately.
Ernest Shackleton used diesel for his cars.
Rutherford B. Hayes
Rutherford's experimenters were Hans Geiger, and Ernest Marsden, both of whom went on to have worthwhile science careers. The metal foil used in the Rutherford experiments was gold, for this foil amy be made extremely thin by careful beating, whilst still being imperforate.
Ernest V. Pannell has written: 'Magnesium its production and use'
Ernest William Watson has written: 'How to use creative perspective'