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In Chapter 7, Thomson summarised his 1906 results on the number of electrons in an atom. He included one important correction: he replaced the beta-particle analysis with one based on the cathode ray experiments of [[August Becker]], giving a result in better agreement with other approaches to the problem.<ref name=Heilbron1968/>{{rp|273}} Experiments by other scientists in this field had shown that atoms contain far fewer electrons than Thomson previously thought. Thomson now believed the number of electrons in an atom was a small multiple of its atomic weight: "the number of corpuscles in an atom of any element is proportional to the atomic weight of the element — it is a multiple, and not a large one, of the atomic weight of the element."<ref>{{harvnb|Thomson|1907|p=27}}</ref>
This meant that almost all of the atom's mass had to be carried by the positive sphere, whatever it was made of. He estimated that a hydrogen atom is 1,700 times heavier than an electron ([[Proton-to-electron mass ratio|the current measurement is 1,837]]).<ref>{{harvnb|Thomson|1907|p=162}}: "Since the mass of a corpuscle is only about one-seventeen-hundredth part of that of an atom of hydrogen, it follows that if there are only a few corpuscles in the hydrogen atom the mass of the atom must in the main be due to its other constituent — the positive electricity."</ref> Thomson notes that no scientist had yet found a positively
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