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Understanding the Modern Periodic Table

In the second of their 1915 papers (Harkins and Wilson 1915b), Harkins and Wilson note from their study of the light elements (up to atomic number 27) that the main isotopic species had atomic masses which are integral multiples of 4. They concluded from this that, for those light nuclei, an important constituent must be the alpha particle just as it must be in the heavier radioactive nuclei which undergo alpha decay. In order to rationalize all the nuclei, including their nuclear charges, they [Pg.23]

In should be noted that both Harkins and Rutherford were interested in the details of nuclear structure from the point of view of understanding stability of nuclei and understanding which mass numbers are stable. This is an important study but it is really nuclear physics and is beyond the scope of this book. [Pg.24]

This section started with the discovery of Soddy and Fajans on radioactive decay around 1910 and the relationship of radioactive decay to the periodic table. At this point in the history, we understand the periodic table and we understand the role of isotopes in the periodic table. We have not yet understood the structure of the modern Table, i.e. first row two elements, second row eight elements, etc. That understanding can be based on Bohr theory of the hydrogen atom originally developed in 1911 and is summarized in Bohr s famous article in Zeitschrift fur Physik (Bohr 1922). [Pg.24]


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