the said that atoms were tiny hard balls (don't laugh XD) that's cannots bes broken ups intos smallers spieces.
no they were not. they were called particles and they split into smaller pieces and kept on multiplying until there is nothing but air and no can see but a technology that scientist can see with a microscope.
Dalton's atomic theory or model was accepted despite errors. This is because his theory provided a logical explanation of concepts and led the way to new experimentations.
1908.
100
Bohr Model
the tin Lizzie.
The idea that atoms are indivisible.
see along time ago before dinosaurs walked the earth. the end.
thomas discovered that the atom contained smaller particals called electrons
The nickname for Thompson's atomic model is the "plum pudding model." This model suggests that atoms are made up of a positively charged "pudding" with negatively charged electrons embedded within it, resembling plums in a pudding.
Dalton's theory was irrelevant to the total compensation of of the Atomic Mass.
Dalton's atomic theory or model was accepted despite errors. This is because his theory provided a logical explanation of concepts and led the way to new experimentations.
The nickname for the Model T Ford was Tin Lizzie. Some people thought the nickname came from the common name given to horses, Lizzie.
Dalton's atomic model was often referred to as the "Billiard Ball Model" because he envisioned atoms as solid, indivisible spheres similar to billiard balls.
Thomson's experiments with cathode ray tubes helped him to discover the electron (which Dalton did not know about). Dalton thought that atoms were in.
Thomson's experiments with cathode ray tubes helped him to discover the electron (which Dalton did not know about). Dalton thought that atoms were in.
Thomson's experiments with cathode ray tubes helped him to discover the electron (which Dalton did not know about). Dalton thought that atoms were in.
Niels Bohr's nickname was "the Great Dane." This nickname refers to his Danish nationality and his significant contributions to the field of physics, particularly in the development of the atomic model.