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Ernest Rutherford Ernest Rutherford
Rutherford Experiment Rutherford Experiment

Ernest Rutherford

Ernest Rutherford
British physicist Ernest Rutherford, winner of the 1908 Nobel Prize in chemistry, pioneered the field of nuclear physics with his research and development of the nuclear theory of atomic structure. Rutherford stated that an atom consists largely of empty space, with an electrically positive nucleus in the center and electrically negative electrons orbiting the nucleus. By bombarding nitrogen gas with alpha particles (nuclear particles emitted through radioactivity), Rutherford engineered the transformation of an atom of nitrogen into both an atom of oxygen and an atom of hydrogen. This experiment was an early stimulus to the development of nuclear energy, a form of energy in which nuclear transformation and disintegration release extraordinary power.
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Appears in these articles:
Neutron; Proton; Quantum Theory; Rutherford, Ernest, 1st Baron Rutherford of Nelson and Cambridge
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