Rutherford Atomic Model | Complete Physics Notes, Numericals & PYQs
Atoms · Chapter Page 01

Rutherford
Atomic Model

Study alpha particle scattering experiment, Rutherford nuclear model, impact parameter, distance of closest approach, limitations, numericals and PYQs in a complete exam-oriented way.

CBSENEETJEE MainJEE AdvancedIB PhysicsIGCSEICSEA-LevelBritish Curriculum
01

Introduction

Why atomic physics needed a new experimental model.

Thomson's model pictured the atom as a diffuse sphere of positive charge with electrons embedded in it. It explained electrical neutrality but had no concentrated centre capable of producing strong deflections.

Rutherford, Geiger and Marsden tested atomic structure by directing energetic alpha particles at a very thin gold foil. The unexpected large-angle and backward scattering showed that positive charge and nearly all atomic mass occupy a minute central nucleus.

Historical Importance

  • Replaced the diffuse positive-charge model.
  • Discovered the nuclear structure of atoms.
  • Established that atoms are mostly empty space.
  • Opened the route to nuclear physics and Bohr's quantum atom.
02

Alpha Particle Scattering Experiment

The experiment that revealed the atomic nucleus.

Alpha Particles

Helium nuclei with charge +2e and large mass. Their high energy and momentum make them effective probes of atomic electric fields.

Thin Gold Foil

Gold can be beaten into an extremely thin sheet, allowing most alpha particles to cross only a small number of atomic layers.

ZnS Screen

A zinc sulphide screen produces tiny flashes when struck. A movable microscope records the angular distribution.

+++++Nucleus12344′3′2′1′r₀Incoming α-particlessmall deflectionmoderate deflectionlarge deflectionback scatteringα-particle
Alpha-particle trajectories on the Rutherford nuclear model
03

Experimental Setup

Components and their functions.

Radioactive Source

Produces energetic alpha particles.

Lead Shield & Slits

Absorb unwanted particles and collimate a narrow beam.

Gold Foil

Provides thin atomic target with high nuclear charge.

ZnS Screen

Converts individual impacts into visible scintillations.

Microscope

Counts flashes at different scattering angles.

Vacuum Chamber

Prevents alpha particles losing energy in air.

Vacuum chamberLead blockRadioactive sourceof α-particlesCollimatornarrow α beamGold foilθCircular Zinc Sulphide (ZnS) screenMicroscopescattered α-particles
Rutherford alpha-particle scattering experimental setup
04

Observations

Four results and what each means physically.

1. Most passed straight.

More than 99% experienced almost no deflection, indicating that most atomic volume contains no concentrated matter or charge.

2. Some deflected slightly.

Particles passing at moderate distance from the nucleus felt weak Coulomb repulsion.

3. Very few had large deflections.

Strong deflection required a close encounter with a compact positive centre.

4. About one in 8000 rebounded.

Nearly head-on particles met a very massive, highly concentrated nucleus.

1010²10³10⁴10⁵10⁶20406080100120140160${[[158,108],[176,175],[205,250],[255,326],[330,378],[415,414],[520,443],[615,456],[700,463],[785,466]].map(([x,y])=>``).join("")}Theoretical predictionExperimental data pointsScattering angle θ (degrees)Number of particles scattered N(θ)
Variation of Number of Scattered Alpha Particles with Scattering Angle
05

Conclusions

Observation-to-conclusion reasoning.

ObservationConclusion
Most particles passed undeflected.The atom is mostly empty space.
Some particles deflected.Positive charge is present and repels alpha particles.
Very few deflected through large angles.Positive charge and mass are concentrated in a tiny nucleus.
Rare particles rebounded.The nucleus is massive and capable of reversing an alpha particle.
Scale: atomic radius is about 10⁻¹⁰ m, whereas nuclear radius is about 10⁻¹⁵ to 10⁻¹⁴ m.
06

Rutherford Nuclear Model

A compact positive nucleus surrounded by orbiting electrons.

  • Nearly all positive charge and mass lie in the central nucleus.
  • Electrons revolve around the nucleus.
  • Electrostatic attraction supplies centripetal force.
  • Total positive and negative charges are equal in a neutral atom.
  • The nucleus occupies a negligible fraction of atomic volume.
+Zeatomic radius ≈10⁻¹⁰ mnuclear radius ≈10⁻¹⁵ mRutherford planetary atom
Atomic and nuclear size comparison
07

Distance of Closest Approach

Head-on alpha particle converts kinetic energy into electrostatic potential energy.

At the turning point, the alpha particle momentarily stops. For a nucleus of atomic number Z:

½mv² = (1/4πε₀)(2e·Ze/r₀)
Kinetic energy = electrostatic potential energy
r₀ = (1/4πε₀)(2Ze²/K)
r₀: closest distance, K: initial alpha kinetic energy

Higher kinetic energy reduces r₀; a larger nuclear charge increases r₀ for the same projectile energy.

+Zeα (+2e)r₀repulsion / turning point
Head-on approach and turning point
08

Impact Parameter

The perpendicular offset that controls Coulomb deflection.

The impact parameter b is the perpendicular distance between the initial straight-line path of the alpha particle and a parallel line through the nuclear centre.

  • b = 0: head-on collision and θ ≈ 180°.
  • Small b: close approach and large scattering angle.
  • Large b: weak repulsion and small scattering angle.
b = (kZze²/2K) cot(θ/2)
For projectile charge ze; for alpha particle z = 2
Zbθlarge b → small deflectionb = 0 → back scattering
Impact parameter and scattering trajectories
09

Limitations of Rutherford Model

Why classical planetary motion cannot describe a stable atom.

Rutherford Model Problems

  1. An orbiting electron accelerates and should radiate energy.
  2. It should lose energy and spiral into the nucleus.
  3. The atom should therefore be unstable.
  4. Continuous radiation cannot explain hydrogen's line spectrum.
  5. No quantised energy levels are predicted.

How Bohr Improved It

Bohr introduced stationary orbits in which electrons do not radiate, quantised angular momentum, and photon exchange only during transitions. This explained atomic stability and hydrogen spectral lines.

Bridge to next chapter: Rutherford discovered the nucleus; Bohr supplied quantum rules for the electrons.
10

Important Formulae

Exam-ready Rutherford relations and scales.

Coulomb Force

F = k(2Ze²/r²)

Centripetal Force

mv²/r = kZe²/r²

Closest Approach

r₀ = 2kZe²/K

Impact Parameter

b = (kZze²/2K)cot(θ/2)

Nuclear Size

R ≈ R₀A¹ᐟ³

R₀≈1.2 fm.

Orders of Size

Ratom≈10⁻¹⁰ m
Rnucleus≈10⁻¹⁵ m
11

40 Solved Numericals

CBSE, NEET, JEE Main and JEE Advanced practice.

12

Complete Exam Practice

CBSE, NEET, JEE and international curriculum question banks.

13

25 Assertion-Reason Questions

Conceptual reasoning with answers and explanations.

14

10 Case Studies

Passages, four questions and detailed solutions.

15

Common Mistakes

Thinking the atom is mostly solid.
Confusing atomic and nuclear radii.
Forgetting alpha charge is +2e.
Using eV without converting to joules where required.
Confusing impact parameter b with closest approach r₀.
Writing observations without their conclusions.
16

Kumar Sir Exam Tips

Rutherford experiment is highly important for CBSE and NEET.
Observations and conclusions are frequently asked.
Closest approach is important for numericals.
Limitations connect directly to Bohr model.
Most particles pass because the atom is mostly empty.
Very few rebound because the nucleus is tiny and massive.
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