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	<title>Maneerat ข่าวสาระน่ารู้ &#187; Electron Theory</title>
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		<title>THE ELECTRON THEORY, OR THE NEW VIEW OF MATTER</title>
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				<category><![CDATA[THE OUTLINE OF SCIENCE]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Central Sun]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chemists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discards]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Electron Theory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Electrons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Equilibrium]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hydrogen Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hypotheses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Independent Existence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[J Thomson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Man Of Science]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mathematicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nucleus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Orbits]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Physicist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Physicists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Planets Of Our Solar System]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Positive Electricity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Structure Of The Atom]]></category>
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The Structure of the Atom
There is general agreement amongst all chemists, physicists, and  mathematicians upon the conclusions which we have so far given. We know that  the atoms of matter are constantly—either spontaneously or under  stimulation—giving off electrons, or breaking up into electrons; and  they therefore contain electrons. Thus we have [...]]]></description>
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<h4>The Structure of the Atom</h4>
<p>There is general agreement amongst all chemists, physicists, and  mathematicians upon the conclusions which we have so far given. We know that  the atoms of matter are constantly—either spontaneously or under  stimulation—giving off electrons, or breaking up into electrons; and  they therefore contain electrons. Thus we have now complete proof of the  independent existence of atoms and also of electrons.</p>
<p>When, however, the man of science tries to tell us <em>how</em> electrons  compose atoms, he passes from facts to speculation, and very difficult  speculation. Take the letter &#8220;o&#8221; as it is printed on this page. In  a little bubble of hydrogen gas no larger than that letter there are  <em>trillions</em> of atoms; and they are not packed together, but are  circulating as freely as dancers in a ball-room. We are asking the physicist  to take one of these minute atoms and tell us how the still smaller electrons  are arranged in it. Naturally he can only make mental pictures, guesses or  hypotheses, which he tries to fit to the facts, and discards when they will  <em>not</em> fit.</p>
<p>At present, after nearly twenty years of critical discussion, there are  two chief theories of the structure of the atom. At first<span><a id="Page_263" name="Page_263"></a></span> Sir J. J.  Thomson imagined the electrons circulating in shells (like the layers of an  onion) round the nucleus of the atom. This did not suit, and Sir E.  Rutherford and others worked out a theory that the electrons circulated round  a nucleus rather like the planets of our solar system revolving round the  central sun. Is there a nucleus, then, round which the electrons revolve? The  electron, as we saw, is a disembodied atom of electricity; we should say, of  &#8220;negative&#8221; electricity. Let us picture these electrons all moving  round in orbits with great velocity. Now it is suggested that there is a  nucleus of &#8220;positive&#8221; electricity attracting or pulling the  revolving electrons to it, and so forming an equilibrium, otherwise the  electrons would fly off in all directions. This nucleus has been recently  named the proton. We have thus two electricities in the atom: the positive =  the nucleus; the negative = the electron. Of recent years Dr. Langmuir has  put out a theory that the electrons do not <em>revolve round</em> the nucleus,  but remain in a state of violent agitation of some sort at fixed distances  from the nucleus.</p>
<div><a id="image414a" name="image414a"></a> <img title="PROFESSOR SIR J. J. THOMSON" src="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20417/20417-h/images/image414a_sm.jpg" alt="PROFESSOR SIR J. J. THOMSON" /></p>
<div>
<p>PROFESSOR SIR J. J. THOMSON</p>
<p>Experimental discoverer of the electronic constitution of    matter, in the Cavendish Physical Laboratory, Cambridge. A great    investigator, noted for the imaginative range of his hypotheses and his    fertility in experimental devices.</p></div>
</div>
<div><a id="image414b" name="image414b"></a> <img title="ELECTRONS PRODUCED BY PASSAGE OF X-RAYS THROUGH AIR" src="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20417/20417-h/images/image414b_sm.jpg" alt="ELECTRONS PRODUCED BY PASSAGE OF X-RAYS THROUGH AIR" /></p>
<div>
<p><em>From the Smithsonian Report</em>, 1915.</p>
<p>ELECTRONS PRODUCED BY PASSAGE OF X-RAYS THROUGH AIR</p>
<p>A photograph clearly showing that electrons are definite    entities. As electrons leave atoms they may traverse matter or pass through    the air in a straight path The illustration shows the tortuous path of    electrons resulting from collision with atoms.</p></div>
</div>
<div><a id="image415a" name="image415a"></a> <img title="MAGNETIC DEFLECTION OF RADIUM RAYS" src="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20417/20417-h/images/image415a_sm.jpg" alt="MAGNETIC DEFLECTION OF RADIUM RAYS" /></p>
<div>
<p>MAGNETIC DEFLECTION OF RADIUM RAYS</p>
<p>The radium rays are made to strike a screen, producing    visible spots of light. When a magnetic field is applied the rays are seen    to be deflected, as in the diagram. This can only happen if the rays carry    an electric charge, and it was by experiments of this kind that we obtained    our knowledge respecting the electric charges carried by radium rays.</p></div>
</div>
<div><a id="image415b" name="image415b"></a> <img title="PROFESSOR R. A. MILLIKAN'S APPARATUS FOR COUNTING ELECTRONS" src="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20417/20417-h/images/image415b_sm.jpg" alt="PROFESSOR R. A. MILLIKAN'S APPARATUS FOR COUNTING ELECTRONS" /></p>
<div>
<p><em>Reproduced by permission of &#8220;Scientific American.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>PROFESSOR R. A. MILLIKAN&#8217;S APPARATUS FOR COUNTING ELECTRONS</p></div>
</div>
<p>But we will confine ourselves here to the facts, and leave the contending  theories to scientific men. It is now pretty generally accepted that an atom  of matter consists of a number of electrons, or charges of negative  electricity, held together by a charge of positive electricity. It is not  disputed that these electrons are in a state of violent motion or strain, and  that therefore a vast energy is locked up in the atoms of matter. To that we  will return later. Here, rather, we will notice another remarkable discovery  which helps us to understand the nature of matter.</p>
<p>A brilliant young man of science who was killed in the war, Mr. Moseley,  some years ago showed that, when the atoms of different substances are  arranged in order of their weight, <em>they are also arranged in the order of  increasing complexity of structure</em>. That is to say, the heavier the atom,  the more electrons it contains. There is a gradual building up of atoms  containing more and more electrons from the lightest atom to the  heaviest.<span><a id="Page_264" name="Page_264"></a></span> Here it is enough to say that as he took element after  element, from the lightest (hydrogen) to the heaviest (uranium) he found a  strangely regular relation between them. If hydrogen were represented by the  figure one, helium by two, lithium three, and so on up to uranium, then  uranium should have the figure ninety-two. This makes it probable that there  are in nature ninety-two elements—we have found eighty-seven—and  that the number Mr. Moseley found is the number of electrons in the atom of  each element; that is to say, the number is arranged in order of the atomic  numbers of the various elements.</p>
<h4>The New View of Matter</h4>
<p>Up to the point we have reached, then, we see what the new view of Matter  is. Every atom of matter, of whatever kind throughout the whole universe, is  built up of electrons in conjunction with a nucleus. From the smallest atom  of all—the atom of hydrogen—which consists of one electron,  rotating round a positively charged nucleus, to a heavy complicated atom,  such as the atom of gold, constituted of many electrons and a complex  nucleus, <em>we have only to do with positive and negative units of  electricity</em>. The electron and its nucleus are particles of electricity.  All Matter, therefore, is nothing but a manifestation of electricity. The  atoms of matter, as we saw, combine and form molecules. Atoms and molecules  are the bricks out of which nature has built up everything; ourselves, the  earth, the stars, the whole universe.</p>
<p>But more than bricks are required to build a house. There are other  fundamental existences, such as the various forms of energy, which give rise  to several complex problems. And we have also to remember, that there are  more than eighty distinct elements, each with its own definite type of atom.  We shall deal with energy later. Meanwhile it remains to be said that,  although we have discovered a great deal about the electron and the  constitution<span><a id="Page_265" name="Page_265"></a></span> of matter, and that while the physicists of our own day seem  to see a possibility of explaining positive and negative electricity, the  nature of them both is unknown. There exists the theory that the particles of  positive and negative electricity, which make up the atoms of matter, are  points or centres of disturbances of some kind in a universal ether, and that  all the various forms of energy are, in some fundamental way, aspects of the  same primary entity which constitutes matter itself.</p>
<p>But the discovery of the property of radio-activity has raised many other  interesting questions, besides that which we have just dealt with. In  radio-active elements, such as uranium for example, the element is breaking  down; in what we call radio-activity we have a manifestation of the  spontaneous change of elements. What is really taking place is a  transmutation of one element into another, from a heavier to a lighter. The  element uranium spontaneously becomes radium, and radium passes through a  number of other stages until it, in turn, becomes lead. Each descending  element is of lighter atomic weight than its predecessor. The changing  process, of course, is a very slow one. It may be that all matter is  radio-active, or can be made so. This raises the question whether all the  matter in the universe may not undergo disintegration.</p>
<p>There is, however, another side of the question, which the discovery of  radio-activity has brought to light, and which has effected a revolution in  our views. We have seen that in radio-active substances the elements are  breaking down. Is there a process of building up at work? If the more  complicated atoms are breaking down into simpler forms, may there not be a  converse process—a building up from simpler elements to more  complicated elements? It is probably the case that both processes are at  work.</p>
<p>There are some eighty-odd chemical elements on the earth to-day: are they  all the outcome of an inorganic evolution, element giving rise to element,  going back and back to some primeval<span><a id="Page_266" name="Page_266"></a></span> stuff from which they were all originally  derived infinitely long ago? Is there an evolution in the inorganic world  which may be going on, parallel to that of the evolution of living things; or  is organic evolution a continuation of inorganic evolution? We have seen what  evidence there is of this inorganic evolution in the case of the stars. We  cannot go deeply into the matter here, nor has the time come for any direct  statement that can be based on the findings of modern investigation. Taking  it altogether the evidence is steadily accumulating, and there are  authorities who maintain that already the evidence of inorganic evolution is  convincing enough. The heavier atoms would appear to behave as though they  were evolved from the lighter. The more complex forms, it is supposed, have  <em>evolved</em> from the simpler forms. Moseley&#8217;s discovery, to which  reference has been made, points to the conclusion that the elements are built  up one from another.</p>
<h4>Other New Views</h4>
<p>We may here refer to another new conception to which the discovery of  radio-activity has given rise. Lord Kelvin, who estimated the age of the  earth at twenty million years, reached this estimate by considering the earth  as a body which is gradually cooling down, &#8220;losing its primitive heat,  like a loaf taken from the oven, at a rate which could be calculated, and  that the heat radiated by the sun was due to contraction.&#8221; Uranium and  radio-activity were not known to Kelvin, and their discovery has upset both  his arguments. Radio-active substances, which are perpetually giving out  heat, introduce an entirely new factor. We cannot now assume that the earth  is necessarily cooling down; it may even, for all we know, be getting hotter.  At the 1921 meeting of the British Association, Professor Rayleigh stated  that further knowledge had extended the probable period during which there  had been life on this globe to about one thousand<span><a id="Page_267" name="Page_267"></a></span> million years,  and the total age of the earth to some small multiple of that. The earth, he  considers, is not cooling, but &#8220;contains an internal source of heat from  the disintegration of uranium in the outer crust.&#8221; On the whole the  estimate obtained would seem to be in agreement with the geological  estimates. The question, of course, cannot, in the present state of our  knowledge, be settled within fixed limits that meet with general  agreement.</p>
<div><a id="image420" name="image420"></a> <img title="MAKING THE INVISIBLE VISIBLE" src="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20417/20417-h/images/image420_sm.jpg" alt="MAKING THE INVISIBLE VISIBLE" /></p>
<div>
<p>MAKING THE INVISIBLE VISIBLE</p>
<p>Radium, as explained in the text, emits rays—the    &#8220;Alpha,&#8221; the &#8220;Beta&#8221; (electrons), and &#8220;Gamma&#8221;    rays. The above illustration indicates the method by which these invisible    rays are made visible, and enables the nature of the rays to be    investigated. To the right of the diagram is the instrument used, the    Spinthariscope, making the impact of radium rays visible on a screen.</p>
<p>The radium rays shoot out in all directions; those that    fall on the screen make it glow with points of light. These points of light    are observed by the magnifying lens.</p>
<p>A. Magnifying lens. B. A zinc sulphite screen. C. A needle    on whose point is placed a speck of radium.</p>
<p>The lower picture shows the screen and needle    magnified..</p></div>
</div>
<div><a id="image421a" name="image421a"></a> <img title="THE THEORY OF ELECTRONS" src="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20417/20417-h/images/image421a_sm.jpg" alt="THE THEORY OF ELECTRONS" /></p>
<div>
<p>THE THEORY OF ELECTRONS</p>
<p>An atom of matter is composed of electrons. We picture an    atom as a sort of miniature solar system, the electrons (particles of    negative electricity) rotating round a central nucleus of positive    electricity, as described in the text. In the above pictorial    representation of an atom the whirling electrons are indicated in the outer    ring. Electrons move with incredible speed as they pass from one atom to    another.</p></div>
</div>
<div><a id="image421b" name="image421b"></a> <img title="ARRANGEMENTS OF ATOMS IN A DIAMOND" src="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20417/20417-h/images/image421b_sm.jpg" alt="ARRANGEMENTS OF ATOMS IN A DIAMOND" /></p>
<div>
<p>ARRANGEMENTS OF ATOMS IN A DIAMOND</p>
<p>The above is a model (seen from two points of view) of the    arrangement of the atoms in a diamond. The arrangement is found by studying    the X-ray spectra of the diamond.</p></div>
</div>
<p>As we have said, there are other fundamental existences which give rise to  more complex problems. The three great fundamental entities in the physical  universe are matter, ether, and energy; so far as we know, outside these  there is nothing. We have dealt with matter, there remain ether and energy.  We shall see that just as no particle of matter, however small, may be  created or destroyed, and just as there is no such thing as empty  space—ether pervades everything—so there is no such thing as  <em>rest</em>. Every particle that goes to make up our solid earth is in a  state of perpetual unremitting vibration; energy &#8220;is the universal  commodity on which all life depends.&#8221; Separate and distinct as these  three fundamental entities—matter, ether, and energy—may appear,  it may be that, after all, they are only different and mysterious phases of  an essential &#8220;oneness&#8221; of the universe.</p>
<h4>The Future</h4>
<p>Let us, in concluding this chapter, give just one illustration of the way  in which all this new knowledge may prove to be as valuable practically as it  is wonderful intellectually. We saw that electrons are shot out of atoms at a  speed that may approach 160,000 miles a second. Sir Oliver Lodge has written  recently that a seventieth of a grain of radium discharges, at a speed a  thousand times that of a rifle bullet, thirty million electrons a second.  Professor Le Bon has calculated that it would take 1,340,000 barrels of  powder to give a bullet the speed of one of these electrons. He shows that  the smallest French copper coin—smaller<span><a id="Page_268" name="Page_268"></a></span> than a farthing—contains  an energy equal to eighty million horsepower. A few pounds of matter contain  more energy than we could extract from millions of tons of coal. Even in the  atoms of hydrogen at a temperature which we could produce in an electric  furnace the electrons spin round at a rate of nearly a hundred trillion  revolutions a second!</p>
<p>Every man asks at once: &#8220;Will science ever tap this energy?&#8221; If  it does, no more smoke, no mining, no transit, no bulky fuel. The energy of  an atom is of course only liberated when an atom passes from one state to  another. The stored up energy is fortunately fast bound by the electrons  being held together as has been described. If it were not so &#8220;the earth  would explode and become a gaseous nebula&#8221;! It is believed that some day  we shall be able to release, harness, and utilise atomic energy. &#8220;I am  of opinion,&#8221; says Sir William Bragg, &#8220;that atom energy will supply  our future need. A thousand years may pass before we can harness the atom, or  to-morrow might see us with the reins in our hands. That is the peculiarity  of Physics—research and &#8216;accidental&#8217; discovery go hand in  hand.&#8221; Half a brick contains as much energy as a small coal-field. The  difficulties are tremendous, but, as Sir Oliver Lodge reminds us, there was  just as much scepticism at one time about the utilisation of steam or  electricity. &#8220;Is it to be supposed,&#8221; he asks, &#8220;that there can  be no fresh invention, that all the discoveries have been made?&#8221; More  than one man of science encourages us to hope. Here are some remarkable words  written by Professor Soddy, one of the highest authorities on radio-active  matter, in our chief scientific weekly (<em>Nature</em>, November 6, 1919):</p>
<div>
<p>The prospects of the successful accomplishment of artificial   transmutation brighten almost daily. The ancients seem to have had something   more than an inkling that the accomplishment of transmutation would confer   upon men powers hitherto the prerogative of the gods. But now we know   definitely that the material aspect of transmutation<span><a id="Page_269" name="Page_269"></a></span> would be of   small importance in comparison with the control over the inexhaustible   stores of internal atomic energy to which its successful accomplishment   would inevitably lead. It has become a problem, no longer redolent of the   evil associations of the age of alchemy, but one big with the promise of a   veritable physical renaissance of the whole world.</div>
<p>If that &#8220;promise&#8221; is ever realised, the economic and social face  of the world will be transformed.</p>
<p>Before passing on to the consideration of ether, light, and energy, let us  see what new light the discovery of the electron has thrown on the nature and  manipulation of electricity.</p>
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