The electron is a subatomic particle containing a negative electric charge. It was discovered in 1897 by British physicist, Sir Joseph John Thomson. He discovered electron by his experiments on the properties of cathode rays. In 1906, he won the Noble Prize in the field of Physics.
How it happened....
The
German physicist Johann Wilhelm Hittorf
studied electrical conductivity in rarefied gases: in 1869, he discovered a glow
emitted from the cathode that increased in size with decrease in
gas pressure. In 1876, the German physicist Eugen Goldstein showed that the rays from this
glow cast a shadow, and he dubbed the rays cathode rays. During the 1870s, the English
chemist and physicist Sir William Crookes
developed the first cathode ray tube to have a high vacuum inside.He then showed that the luminescence rays
appearing within the tube carried energy and moved from the cathode to the anode.
Furthermore, by applying a magnetic field, he was able to deflect the rays,
thereby demonstrating that the beam behaved as though it were negatively charge In 1879, he proposed that these properties
could be explained by what he termed 'radiant matter'. He suggested that this
was a fourth state of matter, consisting of negatively charged molecules that were being projected with high
velocity from the cathode.
The
German-born British physicist Arthur Schuster expanded upon Crookes'
experiments by placing metal plates parallel to the cathode rays and applying
an electric potential
between the plates. The field deflected the rays toward the positively charged
plate, providing further evidence that the rays carried negative charge. By
measuring the amount of deflection for a given level of current, in 1890 Schuster was able to estimate
the charge-to-mass ratio
of the ray components. However, this produced a value that was more than a
thousand times greater than what was expected, so little credence was given to
his calculations at the time
In 1892 Hendrik Lorentz suggested that the mass of these
particles (electrons) could be a consequence of their electric charge.
In 1896,
the British physicist J. J. Thomson, with
his colleagues John S. Townsend
and H. A. Wilson,
performed experiments indicating that cathode rays really were unique
particles, rather than waves, atoms or molecules as was believed earlier.Thomson
made good estimates of both the charge e and the mass m, finding
that cathode ray particles, which he called "corpuscles," had perhaps
one thousandth of the mass of the least massive ion known: hydrogen. He showed
that their charge to mass ratio, e/m, was independent of cathode
material. He further showed that the negatively charged particles produced by
radioactive materials, by heated materials and by illuminated materials were
universal.The name electron was again proposed for these particles by the Irish
physicist George F. Fitzgerald,
and the name has since gained universal acceptance.
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