April 27, 2024, 10:36:51 PM
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Topic: Discovery of the atom, electron etc. Where are the experiments that prove it?  (Read 2197 times)

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Offline user11

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Hi,I find it sad that textbooks state JJ.Thomsons, Rutherfords, Milikan, Borhs etc. discoveries as facts without actually showing the whole experiment and showing in detail how they performed the experiment and how they derived their equations. Are there any textbooks that actually do this? I feel quite dumb when I only learn equations and how to calculate different units or physical quantities from equations without gaining any intuitive understanding of how this works experimentally.

Ben Bob

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The first few lectures MIT's online chemistry series do a good job explaining the early modern discoveries, if you are interested in the video route.
Here's the link to the free playlist:
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/chemistry/5-112-principles-of-chemical-science-fall-2005/video-lectures/

Offline Borek

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These experiments are described in details in the original papers. Could be they can be googled (although they can be behind paywalls).
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