Brain Teaser Scoring a Hat Trick - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Brain Teaser Scoring a Hat Trick

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With eyes still closed, you each put on your hat. When you open your eyes, you can see that Juan and Juanita are wearing blue hats. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Brain Teaser Scoring a Hat Trick


1
Brain Teaser- Scoring a Hat Trick
  • You, Juan, and Juanita, open a box with 5 hats in
    it 3 blue, 2 yellow. You all close your eyes and
    pick a hat from the box. With eyes still closed,
    you each put on your hat. When you open your
    eyes, you can see that Juan and Juanita are
    wearing blue hats.
  • Juanita asks Juan if he knows the color of his
    hat. Juan says, I dont know.
  • Juanita replies, Oh, then I must be wearing a
    blue hat.
  • What color is your hat?

2
  • The History of Atomic Theory

3
Who are these men?
4
Democritus
  • Greek philosopher
  • 400 BC
  • Matter could not be divided into smaller and
    smaller pieces forever.
  • Named the smallest piece of matter atomos,
    meaning not to be cut.

5
  • This theory was ignored and forgotten for
    more than 2000 years!

6
Why?
  • Aristotle and Plato favored the earth, fire, air
    and water approach to the nature of matter.
  • Their ideas were believed because of their
    standings as philosophers.

7
Daltons Model
  • English Chemist John Dalton
  • Early 1800s
  • Performed experiments that eventually led to the
    acceptance of the idea of atoms.

8
Foundation of Modern Chemistry
  • Elements are composed of atoms.
  • Atoms are indivisible and indestructible.
  • Atoms of the same element are exactly alike.
  • Atoms of different elements are different.
  • Compounds are formed by the joining of atoms of
    two or more elements.

9
Thomsons Plum Pudding Model
  • English scientist J.J. Thomson
  • 1897
  • 1st hint that an atom is made of even smaller
    particles.

10
  • Atom positively charged substance with
    negatively charged electrons scattered about,
    like raisins in a pudding.
  • When passed current through gas, it gave off rays
    of negatively charged particles.

11
  • Conclusions
  • (-) charges came from
  • within the atom.
  • The atom was divisible!
  • He called them
  • corpuscles, today
  • known as electrons.
  • He reasoned there
  • must be () particles,
  • but never found them.

Where did they come from?
12
Rutherfords Gold Foil Expt
  • English physicist Ernest Rutherford
  • 1908
  • Fired () particles at gold foil (2000 atoms
    thick)
  • Most went through some bounced back

13
  • Conclusions
  • Atoms were mostly open space
  • An atom had a small, dense, positively charged
    center that repelled his positively charged
    bullets.
  • He called the center the nucleus
  • Electrons are outside nucleus.

14
Bohr Model
  • Danish scientist Niels Bohr
  • 1913
  • Electrons move in orbits around nucleus
  • These orbits, or energy levels, are located at
    certain distances from the nucleus.

15
The Wave Model
  • Based on wave mechanics.
  • Electrons do not move about an atom in a definite
    path, like the planets around the sun.
  • Impossible to know exact location of an electron.
  • According to the modern atomic model, at atom has
    a small positively charged nucleus surrounded by
    a large region in which there are enough
    electrons to make an atom neutral.

16
Electron Cloud
  • A space in which electrons are likely to be
    found.
  • E- whirl about the nucleus billions of times in
    one second
  • E- with lowest energy are found closest to the
    nucleus
  • E- with highest energy are found, farther from
    the nucleus.

17
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