cm. and with values of
as large as 135, which is very much larger than any which appear in the work of Dr. Ehrenhaft and his pupils, I have thus far found no evidence of a law of motion essentially different from that which I published in 1913, and further elaborated and refined in 1923.
There has then appeared up to the present time no evidence whatever for the existence of a sub-electron. The chapter having to do with its discussion is now considered for the present at least to have been closed,[134] but it constitutes an interesting historical document worthy of study as an illustration on the one hand of the solidity of the foundations upon which the atomic theory of electricity now rests, and on the other hand of the severity of the gauntlet of criticism which new results must run before they gain admission to the body of established truth in physics.
CHAPTER IX
THE STRUCTURE OF THE ATOM
We have shown in the preceding chapters how within the last two decades there has been discovered beneath the nineteenth-century world of molecules and atoms a wholly new world of electrons, the very existence of which was undreamed of twenty years ago. We have seen that these electrons, since they can be detached by X-rays from all kinds of neutral atoms, must be constituents of all atoms. Whether or not they are the sole constituents we have thus far made no attempt to determine. We have concerned ourselves with studying the properties of these electrons themselves and have found that they are of two kinds, negative and positive, which are, however, exactly alike in strength of charge but wholly different in inertia or mass, the negative being commonly associated with a mass which is but ¹⁄₁₈₄₅ of that of the lightest known atom, that of hydrogen, while the positive appears never to be associated with a mass smaller than that of the hydrogen atom. We have found how to isolate and measure accurately the electronic charge and have found that this was the key which unlocked the door to many another otherwise inaccessible physical magnitude. It is the purpose of this chapter to consider certain other fields of exact knowledge which have been opened up through the measurement of the electron, and in particular to discuss what the physicist, as he has peered with his newly discovered agencies, X-rays, radioactivity, ultra-violet light, etc., into the insides of atoms, has been able to discover regarding the numbers and sizes and relative positions and motions of these electronic constituents, and to show how far he has gone in answering the question as to whether the electrons are the sole building-stones of the atoms.
1. THE SIZES OF ATOMS
One of the results of the measurement of the electronic charge was to make it possible to find the quantity which is called the diameter of an atom with a definiteness and precision theretofore altogether unattained.
It was shown in [chap. V] that the determination of