How our understanding of the atom evolved from the 19th to 20th century
Why did scientists change the model of the atom?
Science is never finished. When new experiments produce results an existing model cannot explain, scientists revise or replace that model. The story of atomic models is one of the best examples of this in history.
In the 19th century, scientists knew atoms existed and contained both positive and negative charges — but had no idea how those charges were arranged. J.J. Thomson proposed the first structural model in 1897. Ernest Rutherford redesigned it in 1911 after his famous gold foil experiment, and Niels Bohr refined it further in 1913.
Thomson model (1897)
"Plum pudding" — electrons scattered in a positive sphere
Rutherford-Bohr model (1911–1913)
Dense nucleus at center; electrons orbit in shells
Key idea: Both models agreed that atoms contain electrons and positive charge — but they disagreed completely on WHERE the positive charge lives and how the electrons are arranged.
Thomson model (1897)
Scientist: J.J. Thomson (British physicist) Nickname: The "plum pudding" model
● Positive charge is spread evenly throughout a sphere
● Electrons are embedded randomly inside that sphere
● No central nucleus — charge is uniform
● Electrons are stationary (not orbiting)
● Atom is a solid, uniform ball of positive charge
What it got wrong: Thomson could not explain why alpha particles bounced sharply back in Rutherford's experiment. A uniform sphere would deflect all particles slightly — not send some bouncing almost backward.
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Uniform positive sphere: Thomson believed the entire atom was one big ball of evenly distributed positive charge — like a cloud of positive electricity filling the whole atom uniformly.
Embedded electrons: Thomson discovered electrons in 1897. He placed them inside the positive sphere like raisins in pudding — scattered, stationary, and embedded throughout.
Full explanation
Thomson's model was revolutionary because it was the first model to place electrons inside the atom. His cathode ray tube experiments proved electrons existed and were much lighter than the atom itself.
Since the atom is electrically neutral, he assumed negative electrons must be balanced by positive charge. Without evidence of a nucleus, he spread the positive charge uniformly throughout the atom.
The model was logical given what was known — but Rutherford's gold foil experiment in 1909 shattered it completely.
Rutherford-Bohr model (1911–1913)
Scientists: Ernest Rutherford (1911) + Niels Bohr (1913) Evidence: Gold foil experiment — alpha particles bounced sharply back off gold, proving a dense positive center existed.
● Positive charge is concentrated in a tiny nucleus at the center
● The nucleus contains most of the atom's mass
● Electrons orbit the nucleus in defined shells
● Most of the atom is empty space
● Electrons are negatively charged and in motion
What it got right: The nucleus is real — confirmed by modern science. Orbiting electrons was a major advance, though Bohr's circular orbits were later replaced by quantum probability clouds.
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Positive nucleus: All the positive charge (and most of the mass) is packed into an incredibly tiny central nucleus. Alpha particles that hit it head-on bounced back — those that missed passed through empty space.
Orbiting electrons: Electrons travel in circular orbits (shells) around the nucleus — like planets around the sun. Bohr added that electrons occupy specific energy levels and do not spiral into the nucleus.
Full explanation
Rutherford fired positively charged alpha particles at an ultra-thin sheet of gold. If Thomson's model were correct, all particles should pass through with only slight deflections. Instead, a small fraction bounced almost straight back.
Rutherford said it was "as if you fired artillery shells at tissue paper and they came back and hit you." The only explanation: positive charge was concentrated in a tiny, dense core — the nucleus. Most particles passed through because most of the atom is empty space.
Bohr added in 1913 that electrons orbit at specific energy levels — they can jump between levels by absorbing or releasing energy as light, explaining why atoms produce specific colors of light (emission spectra).
Side-by-side comparison
Each card shows how both models differ on one feature.
Location of positive charge
Thomson
Spread evenly throughout the entire atom
Rutherford-Bohr
Concentrated in a tiny central nucleus
Nucleus
Thomson
NO No nucleus concept
Rutherford-Bohr
YES Dense positive nucleus at center
Electrons
Thomson
Embedded stationary inside positive sphere
Rutherford-Bohr
Orbiting the nucleus in defined shells
Most of atom is empty space?
Thomson
NO Atom is a solid sphere
Rutherford-Bohr
YES Mostly empty space between nucleus & electrons
Where is most of the mass?
Thomson
Distributed throughout sphere
Rutherford-Bohr
Concentrated in the nucleus
Overall charge of atom
Thomson
Neutral — positive balances negative
Rutherford-Bohr
Neutral — positive balances negative
Evidence base
Thomson
Cathode ray tube experiments (1897)
Rutherford-Bohr
Gold foil experiment (1909–1911)
Correct today?
Thomson
NO Replaced by Rutherford's findings
Rutherford-Bohr
MOSTLY Nucleus confirmed; orbits refined by quantum mechanics
The one thing they share: Both models agree the atom is electrically neutral — positive charge balances the electrons. This was known before either model was proposed.
Answering the GED question
"Which statement describes one feature of the Rutherford-Bohr atom model that the Thomson model does NOT share?"
WRONG
"Identifies different elements by numbers of particles." — Neither model specifically addresses element identification this way.
WRONG
"Maintains observed neutral charge of atoms." — BOTH models agree atoms are neutral. Not unique to Rutherford-Bohr.
WRONG
"Correctly describes the types of particles in the atom." — Both models include electrons and positive charge.
CORRECT
"Restricts the positive charge of the atom to the nucleus." — Thomson spreads charge everywhere; Rutherford-Bohr concentrates it in a central nucleus. This is the unique difference.
How our model of the atom evolved
~400 BCE
Democritus — first atomic idea
Greek philosopher proposed all matter is made of tiny, indivisible particles called "atomos." Pure philosophy — no experiments.
1803
John Dalton — atomic theory
Proposed atoms are solid, indivisible spheres. Different elements have different atomic masses. First evidence-based atomic model.
1897
J.J. Thomson — "plum pudding" model
Discovered the electron using cathode ray tubes. Proposed electrons are embedded in a uniform positive sphere. First model with internal structure.
1909–1911
Ernest Rutherford — nuclear model
Gold foil experiment proved most of the atom is empty space and positive charge is concentrated in a tiny central nucleus. Thomson's model was discarded.
1913
Niels Bohr — planetary model
Added electron energy levels (shells). Electrons orbit at specific distances and energies. Explained why atoms emit light at specific wavelengths.
1926+
Quantum mechanical model
Schrödinger and Heisenberg showed electrons don't follow defined orbits — they exist in probability "clouds" called orbitals. The current accepted model.