Answer:
J J Thomson's plum pudding model indicated that <em>the negative electrons represented the raisins in the pudding and the dough contained the positive charge.</em>
Explanation:
Thomson discovered electron in 1897 and demonstrated that cathode rays were negatively charged. In addition, he also studied positively charged particles in neon gas. Thomson realized that the accepted model of an atom did not account for negatively or positively charged particles. Therefore, he proposed a model of the atom which he likened to plum pudding. The model indicate that
<em>The negative electrons represented the raisins in the pudding and the dough contained the positive charge. </em>
Thomson's model of the atom did explain some of the electrical properties of the atom due to the electrons, but failed to recognize the positive charges in the atom as particles.
<em>The current model indicate the presence of the a positively charged center of the atom that is denser than the rest of it called the nucleus. This dense center is made up of positively charged protons and neutrally charged neutrons. Around the outside of the nucleus the electrons are organized on rings. These electrons are arranged in a certain pattern that is the same for all atoms.</em>