- Millikan didn’t have a calibrated eyepiece and so he used Stokes’s law to determine the radius of the drop and therefore its volume. To use Stokes’s law, Millikan had to measure the terminal velocity of the oil drop when it fell freely in air.
- Millikan performed the experiment 100’s of times and noted that all charges were simple multiples of:
e = + or – 1.602 X 10-19 C
- This is referred to as the elementary charge.
- +e is the charge on the proton and –e is the charge on the electron.
- Electric charges are explained simply by an excess or deficit of electrons. Therefore, by knowing the charge, the number of electrons involved can be calculated.
e.g. An object has a charge of –5.77 X 10-18 C. How many excess electrons does this charge represent?