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No, Bohr's atomic model does not look like an onion. It represents the atom as a small, positively charged nucleus surrounded by orbiting electrons in fixed energy levels. The model is more complex and based on quantum mechanics principles.
The Bohr atomic model is similar to solar system.
Neil Bohrs atomic model is simply called Bohrs model. It states that electrons have a certain amount of energy, so they must follow certain orbits. This is different from the modern atomic model.
Experiments like the photoelectric effect and atomic emission spectra provided evidence that electrons exist in discrete energy levels. These findings challenged the classical model of the atom, leading to Niels Bohr proposing his model in 1913 to explain the quantization of electron energy levels in atoms.
Niels Bohr created this model; electrons move around the positive atomic nucleus.
The atomic model in which electrons orbit the nucleus the way that planets orbit the sun is called the Bohr atom. We now know that atoms are really not very much like that at all, and electrons do not orbit the nucleus, they form shells, rather than orbits.