The Foundations of Atomic Theory
Ever wondered what everything around you is really made of? The quest to answer this question spans thousands of years. While Democritus first proposed the idea of atoms, he had no evidence to back it up. Real atomic science began in the 1800s with scientists like Dalton and Proust, who collected evidence through careful experiments.
Proust discovered something remarkable compounds always contain elements in the same proportions, no matter their source. This became known as the law of definite proportions. Building on this, Dalton conducted experiments with tin oxides and observed that oxygen always combined with tin in specific, fixed ratios (11 or 12), never in between.
Dalton's atomic theory proposed that atoms are indivisible and are the smallest components of matter. Each element has its own unique type of atom, and compounds form when atoms combine in fixed proportions. According to Dalton, atoms of different elements have different properties and masses, which explains why elements behave differently.
💡 Think of atoms like LEGO pieces - different elements are different pieces, and they connect in specific ways to create compounds!