Plum pudding. . .with negatively charged rasins and positivly charged blob
You can find a drawing of Thomson's model of the atom in most chemistry textbooks or online sources that discuss the history of atomic models. The model, also known as the "plum pudding model," depicts the atom as a positively charged sphere with negatively charged electrons embedded within it like raisins in a cake.
J. J. Thomson
In Thomson's plum pudding model, the mass of the atom is spread out uniformly throughout the positively charged sphere, similar to plums in a pudding. This model proposed that electrons were embedded in the positive sphere like plums in the pudding, representing the negative charges.
An atom is the basic unit of matter, consisting of a nucleus containing protons and neutrons, surrounded by electrons. The concept of the atom was first proposed by ancient Greek philosophers such as Democritus and Leucippus, but modern understanding of the atom was developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by scientists like J.J. Thomson, Ernest Rutherford, and Niels Bohr.
The concept of the atom dates back to ancient Greek philosophers like Democritus and Leucippus around 400 BC. However, the modern understanding of the atom, with a nucleus containing protons and neutrons surrounded by electrons, was developed by scientists like J.J. Thomson, Ernest Rutherford, and Niels Bohr in the early 20th century.
I believe it is known as "Thomson's Model" or "Thomson's Atomic Model"
That would be Thomson
J. J. Thomson
J J Thomson
Plum pudding and raisin bread are good comparisons for Thomson's model of the atom because both posit a positively charged "pudding" with negatively charged "raisins" embedded within, similar to Thomson's idea of the atom having a "sea" of positive charge with electrons scattered throughout. This analogy helps to illustrate the distribution of charge within the atom proposed by Thomson.
J.J. thomson's model doesn't have an electrons flowing around like how are planets orbit the sun. The current model has these things.
J.J. thomson's model doesn't have an electrons flowing around like how are planets orbit the sun. The current model has these things.
no i dont think that that is true. never really thought that they looked like chicken. I thought they no i dont think that that is true. never really thought that they looked like chicken. I thought they no i dont think that that is true. never really thought that they looked like chicken. I thought they looked like brocolii no i dont think that that is true. never really thought that they looked like chicken. I thought they looked like brocolii
You can find a drawing of Thomson's model of the atom in most chemistry textbooks or online sources that discuss the history of atomic models. The model, also known as the "plum pudding model," depicts the atom as a positively charged sphere with negatively charged electrons embedded within it like raisins in a cake.
J.J. Thomson is credited with the discovery of the electron in about 1904. He envisioned negatively charged "corpuscles" floating in a positively charged cloud, just like plums in a plum pudding. This was the "plum pudding" model of the atom, and it lasted until Geiger and Marsden conducted their gold foil experiment in about 1909.
Niels Bohr showed that electrons could have only specific amounts of energy, leading them to move in certain orbits. Hope this helps!
Atoms were thought to have electrons as the only true particles prior to Rutherford's analysis of the 'gold foil experiment' and, to explain why atoms are neutral, the atom was though to be something like a pudding of positive (no particles) with the electrons stuck in the atomic pudding. Prior experiments by several scientists, culminating by studies of several gases by JJ Thomson who came to these conclusion.