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who discovered proton rutherford or goldstein

Ernest Rutherford is credited with the discovery of the proton, not Goldstein.

Quick Scoop: Who Actually Discovered the Proton?

Short Answer

  • The discovery of the proton is formally credited to Ernest Rutherford.
  • Eugen Goldstein discovered canal rays (anode rays) in 1886, which are streams of positive ions (including hydrogen ions), but he did not identify the proton as a fundamental nuclear particle.

What Rutherford Did

  • Around 1917, Rutherford bombarded nitrogen gas with alpha particles and observed that hydrogen nuclei were ejected from nitrogen atoms.
  • This showed that the hydrogen nucleus appears inside heavier atoms and is a fundamental building block of all nuclei.
  • In 1920 he named this positively charged hydrogen nucleus the proton and established it as a basic subatomic particle.

So, in school and exams, the correct name for “who discovered the proton: Rutherford or Goldstein?” is Ernest Rutherford.

Where Goldstein Fits In

  • Goldstein’s canal-ray experiments proved the existence of positive rays in discharge tubes and showed the presence of hydrogen ions, but he did not single out and define the proton as a universal nuclear particle.
  • That is why some older or simplified sources loosely say “proton was discovered by Goldstein” (because of canal rays), but modern, detailed accounts and exam-level chemistry attribute the proton’s discovery and naming to Rutherford.

TL;DR

  • Question: Who discovered proton – Rutherford or Goldstein?
  • Standard, accepted answer: Ernest Rutherford (discovery and naming as a nuclear particle).
  • Goldstein: discovered canal rays , an important step but not credited with discovering the proton as we define it today.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.