John Dalton and His Atomic Theory
Ever wonder what everything around you is actually made of? John Dalton did too! This English scientist (1766-1844) transformed chemistry by developing the first modern atomic theory. Before becoming famous for this work, Dalton researched color blindness—a condition that was even called "Daltonism" since he was the first to study it.
Dalton's breakthrough came from studying gases and compounds. By investigating how gases behave under pressure, he concluded they must consist of tiny, individual particles in constant random motion. When examining compounds (substances made of multiple elements), he noticed they always contained the same elements in the same proportions.
His atomic theory boiled down to three revolutionary ideas all substances are made of atoms, all atoms of the same element are identical with the same mass, and atoms join together in specific ratios to form compounds. This elegant explanation helped scientists understand why chemical reactions follow predictable patterns.
Did you know? Dalton's work built upon a concept first proposed by the Greek philosopher Democritus nearly 2,000 years earlier, but Dalton provided the scientific evidence that turned it from philosophy into science!