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Subatomic Particles
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Atomic and Nuclear Physics DOE-HDBK-1019/1-93 ATOMIC NATURE OF MATTER Bohr Model of the Atom The  British  physicist  Ernest  Rutherford  postulated  that  the  positive  charge  in  an  atom  is concentrated in a small region called a nucleus at the center of the atom with electrons existing in  orbits  around  it.    Niels  Bohr,  coupling  Rutherford's  postulation  with  the  quantum  theory introduced  by  Max  Planck,  proposed  that  the  atom  consists  of  a  dense  nucleus  of  protons surrounded  by  electrons  traveling  in  discrete  orbits  at  fixed  distances  from  the  nucleus.    An electron in one of these orbits or shells has a specific or discrete quantity of energy (quantum). When an electron moves from one allowed orbit to another allowed orbit, the energy difference between the two states is emitted or absorbed in the form of a single quantum of radiant energy called a photon.   Figure 1 is Bohr's model of the hydrogen atom showing an electron as having just  dropped  from  the  third  shell  to  the  first  shell  with  the  emission  of  a  photon  that  has  an energy = hv.   (h = Planck's constant = 6.63 x 10-34 J-s and v = frequency of the photon.)   Bohr's theory  was  the  first  to  successfully  account  for  the  discrete  energy  levels  of  this  radiation  as measured in the laboratory.   Although Bohr's atomic  model is designed specifically to  explain the  hydrogen  atom,  his  theories  apply  generally  to  the  structure  of  all  atoms.     Additional information on electron shell theory can be found in the Chemistry Fundamentals Handbook. Figure 1    Bohr's Model of the Hydrogen Atom Rev. 0 Page 3 NP-01

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