Rutherford Scattering (AQA GCSE Physics)
Revision Note
Rutherford Scattering
Alpha Scattering
In 1909 a group of scientists were investigating the Plum Pudding model
Physicist, Ernest Rutherford was instructing two of his students, Hans Geiger and Ernest Marsden to carry out the experiment
They were directing a beam of alpha particles (He2+ ions) at a thin gold foil
They expected the alpha particles to travel through the gold foil, and maybe change direction a small amount
Instead, they discovered that :
Most of the alpha particles passed straight through the foil
Some of the alpha particles changed direction but continued through the foil
A few of the alpha particles bounced back off the gold foil
The bouncing back could not be explained by the Plum Pudding model, so a new model had to be created
When alpha particles are fired at thin gold foil, most of them go straight through, some are deflected and a very small number bounce straight back
The Nuclear Model
Ernest Rutherford made different conclusions from the findings of the experiment
The table below describes the findings and conclusions of A, B and C from the image above:
Alpha Scattering Findings and Conclusions Table
Rutherford proposed the nuclear model of the atom
In the nuclear model:
Nearly all of the mass of the atom is concentrated in the centre of the atom (in the nucleus)
The nucleus is positively charged
Negatively charged electrons orbit the nucleus at a distance
Rutherford’s nuclear model replaced the Plum Pudding model
The nuclear model could explain experimental observations better than the Plum Pudding model
The Nuclear model replaced the Plum Pudding model as it could better explain the observations of Rutherford’s Scattering Experiment
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