yes,
1. draw a circle and write in it 11 because that's its atomic number 2. because sodium is in the third period of the periodic table, draw 3 circles (shells) around the middle one 3. in the first shell draw two dots across representing electrons 4. next on the second shell draw 8 dots 5. on the third shell, draw 1 dot because the it is on group 1 of the periodic table If you follow this format, you can do any element! You need to know the group, period, atomic number to do this, though.
Niels Bohr spoke Danish, English, and German. He was from Denmark and used all three languages in his scientific work and collaborations.
Ernest Rutherford is known for his discovery of the atomic nucleus and the Rutherford model of the atom. Niels Bohr, on the other hand, proposed the Bohr model of the atom, which introduced the concept of quantized electron orbits. Both scientists made significant contributions to the field of atomic theory.
The atomic model in which electrons orbit the nucleus the way that planets orbit the sun is called the Bohr atom. We now know that atoms are really not very much like that at all, and electrons do not orbit the nucleus, they form shells, rather than orbits.
The Bohr model suggests that electrons orbit the nucleus in circles and that these circles are all in a single plane.The electron clouds are three-dimensional, not planar.Some of the electron clouds are spherical, some are of other shapes; they are of different shapes (not all circular).The positions of electrons are probabilistic rather than deterministic.
The Bohr model does not work at all for atoms having more than one electron because it does not account for interactions between the electrons.
It hasn't, at all.
a diagram of all the elements including , protons neutrons, atoms
Bohr was a Danish scientist who is known for his creation of the Bohr model, a flat model showing all shells in an atom and many others.You should probably check out Wikipedia,http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niels_Bohrfor more information, for I am probably not the expert on the subject. :)
it couldn't explain all the observed transitions
1. draw a circle and write in it 11 because that's its atomic number 2. because sodium is in the third period of the periodic table, draw 3 circles (shells) around the middle one 3. in the first shell draw two dots across representing electrons 4. next on the second shell draw 8 dots 5. on the third shell, draw 1 dot because the it is on group 1 of the periodic table If you follow this format, you can do any element! You need to know the group, period, atomic number to do this, though.
Niels Bohr spoke Danish, English, and German. He was from Denmark and used all three languages in his scientific work and collaborations.
Ernest Rutherford is known for his discovery of the atomic nucleus and the Rutherford model of the atom. Niels Bohr, on the other hand, proposed the Bohr model of the atom, which introduced the concept of quantized electron orbits. Both scientists made significant contributions to the field of atomic theory.
The atomic model in which electrons orbit the nucleus the way that planets orbit the sun is called the Bohr atom. We now know that atoms are really not very much like that at all, and electrons do not orbit the nucleus, they form shells, rather than orbits.
scientists think the electron cloud theory is more acurate because the electrons are not like the solar system. they dont have a certain position(bohr theory0 but go around in all different dirrections forming a cloud.
The Bohr model suggests that electrons orbit the nucleus in circles and that these circles are all in a single plane.The electron clouds are three-dimensional, not planar.Some of the electron clouds are spherical, some are of other shapes; they are of different shapes (not all circular).The positions of electrons are probabilistic rather than deterministic.
Democritus proposed the concept of atoms as indivisible particles that make up all matter. Dalton developed the atomic theory, stating that elements are composed of indivisible atoms with specific properties. Thomson discovered the electron and proposed the "plum pudding" model of the atom. Rutherford conducted the gold foil experiment, leading to the discovery of the atomic nucleus. Bohr introduced the planetary model of the atom, with electrons orbiting the nucleus in specific energy levels.