plumpuddingmodellen
Plumpuddingmodellen, commonly known in English as the plum pudding model, was an early 20th-century model of the atom proposed by J. J. Thomson. In this framework, the atom was conceived as a uniformly positively charged sphere in which negatively charged electrons were embedded like plums in a pudding. The overall neutrality of the atom arose from a balance between the diffuse positive background and the electrons.
Origin and context: Following Thomson’s discovery of the electron in 1897, the plum pudding model offered a
Structure and implications: The model implied that the atom’s mass and positive charge were distributed across
Limitations and legacy: The plum pudding model faced difficulties explaining experimental results, notably the scattering of