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.
![Rutherford on the New Zealand 100-dollar banknote.](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_tQfBPnxjRta51D_bm0YeS5ToJ3qY2Jj5M4s2D8ByIZlBHUHbStg1C08BHznU1r2MnfUKFz__TMfnd86W62kLQc5T2amHopOu3t4zCo-N2uur5wn2gvWaHiatPUXd_tnzHwR9PnJurJstf__8yD5-BBAzvHPdLpyNtBr3TKxyUS9L7lI7nAiqA3WtMOHBdsdukOWClqRMs=s0-d)
Rutherford on the New Zealand 100-dollar banknote.
Throughout his career Rutherford displayed his ability to work
creatively with associates, some of whom were already established at the
institutions to which he was appointed and others of whom he attracted
as doctoral or postgraduate students. At McGill University in Montreal,
his first appointment, he worked with Frederick Soddy on radioactive
decay. At Manchester University he collaborated with Hans Geiger (of
Geiger counter fame), Niels Bohr (whose model of atomic structure
succeeded Rutherford's), and H. G. J. Moseley (who obtained experimental
evidence for atomic numbers). During World War I, this Manchester
research group was largely dispersed, and Rutherford turned to solving
problems connected with submarine detection. After the war he succeeded
J. J. Thomson in the Cavendish Professorship at Cambridge and again
gathered a vigorous research group, including James Chadwick, the
discoverer of the neutron.
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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