How did Rutherford's gold foil experiment differ from his expectations?
Thomson model argues that an atom is a sphere of positive charge with the negatively-charged electrons scattered like "raisins in a pudding", Rutherford and his students fully expected that an α particle will pass through the gold foil with just a slight deflection on the angles since the α particle is weakly positively charged. In the case of the experiment, some of the α particles did not only deflect at very large angles, but some have even bounce back straight to the origin! The experiment proves a number of things:(1) that an atom is mostly consist of empty space (because the most of the rays went straight through) (2) that something very solid (nucleus) is inside every atom to make some of the rays "bounced back" (3) that the nucleus is positively charged to make some of the rays be deflected at odd angles (like repels like, as in a magnet).