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XIX.—Note on Professor Whittaker's Atomic Model
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
In the Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh for 1921–22 Whittaker suggests an atomic model designed to absorb and emit radiation by quanta. This model consists essentially of a system of radial magnets, set as the spokes of a wheel with like poles (say south) at the centre. The electron approaching the wheel along the axis of symmetry will, according to the author, set the wheel into rotation, giving a “magnetic current.” The action of the approaching charge, giving a rotation to the North Pole and a “magnetic current,” is quite the analogue to the North Pole approaching a non-axial electric charge, setting it into rotation, and producing an “electric current.” The electron, with energy exceeding a definite value, succeeds in going through the atom, with the result that a definite amount of energy is permanently transferred from the electron to the atomic wheel, a result which resembles the absorption of electronic energy by the atom in spectrum excitation.
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1926
References
page 245 note * Proc. Roy. Soc. Edin., 1921–22, p. 129.
page 247 note * Baker, B. B., Phil. Mag., 44, 777 (1922)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
page 247 note † Lorentz, H. A., Proc. Amsterdam Acad., 25 (1922)Google Scholar.
page 248 note * Francis Watkins, A Popular Sketch of Electro-Magnetism and Electro-Dynamics, 1828; P. M. Roget, Treatise on Electro-Magnetism, 1832.
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