Ernest Rutherford Biography
Rabu, 19 November 2014
A consummate experimentalist, Ernest Rutherford (1871–1937) was
responsible for a remarkable series of discoveries in the fields of
radioactivity and nuclear physics. He discovered alpha and beta rays,
set forth the laws of radioactive decay, and identified alpha particles
as helium nuclei. Most important, he postulated the nuclear structure of
the atom: experiments done in Rutherford's laboratory showed that when
alpha particles are fired into gas atoms, a few are violently deflected,
which implies a dense, positively charged central region containing
most of the atomic mass.Born on a farm in New Zealand, the fourth of 12 children, Rutherford completed a degree at the University of New Zealand and began teaching unruly schoolboys. He was released from this task by a scholarship to Cambridge University, where he became J. J. Thomson's first graduate student at the Cavendish Laboratory. There he began experimenting with the transmission of radio waves, went on to join Thomson's ongoing investigation of the conduction of electricity through gases, and then turned to the field of radioactivity just opened up by Henri Becquerel and Pierre and Marie Curie.
Like Thomson, Rutherford garnered many honors. He received the Nobel Prize in chemistry for 1908; he was made a knight, then a peer with a seat in the House of Lords; and for the ultimate honor he was buried in Westminster Abbey
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