Chadwick discovers the final necessary particle
In 1932 Chadwick realized that radiation that had been observed by
Walther Bothe, Herbert L. Becker, Irène and Frédéric Joliot-Curie was
actually due to a neutral particle of about the same mass as the proton,
that he called the neutron (following a suggestion about the need for such a
particle, by Rutherford). In the same year Dmitri Ivanenko suggested that
neutrons were in fact spin 1/2 particles and that the nucleus contained
neutrons to explain the mass not due to protons, and that there were no
electrons in the nucleus-- only protons and neutrons.
The neutron spin immediately solved the problem of the spin of nitrogen-14,
as the one unpaired proton and one unpaired neutron in this model, each
contribute a spin of 1/2 in the same direction, for a final total spin of 1.
With the discovery of the neutron, scientists at
last could calculate what fraction of binding energy each nucleus had, from
comparing the nuclear mass with that of the protons and neutrons which
composed it. Differences between nuclear masses calculated in this way, and
when nuclear reactions were measured, where found to agree with Einstein's
calculation of the equivalence of mass and energy to high accuracy (within
1% as of in 1934).
Yukawa's
meson postulated to bind nuclei
In 1935 Hideki Yukawa proposed the first significant theory of the
strong force to explain how the nucleus holds together.
In the Yukawa interaction a virtual particle, later called a meson, mediated
a force between all nucleons, including protons and neutrons. This force
explained why nuclei did not disintigrate under the influence of proton
repulsion, and it also gave an explanation of why the attractive strong
force had a more limited range than the electromagnetic repulsion between
protons. Later, the discovery of the pi meson showed it to have the
properties of Yukawa's particle.
With Yukawa's papers, the modern model of the atom
was complete. The center of the atom contains a tight ball of neutrons and
protons, which is held together by the strong nuclear force, unless it is
too large. Unstable nuclei may undergo alpha decay, in which they emit an
energetic helium nucleus, or beta decay, in which they eject an electron (or
positron). After one of these decays the resultant nucleus may be left in an
excited state, and in this case it decays to its ground state by emitting
high energy photons (gamma decay).
The study of the strong and weak nuclear forces (the
latter explained by Enrico Fermi via Fermi's interaction in 1934) led
physicists to collide nuclei and electrons at ever higher energies. This
research became the science of particle physics, the crown jewel of which is
the standard model of particle physics which unifies the strong, weak, and
electromagnetic forces.