I have been thinking about that idea you suggested about using Rutherford's experiment to calculate a radius of a nucleus. How to you suppose it would work? Because I cant even really imagine how the radius would be calculated either. This may be a far stretch but I have a possible hypothesis, I would love some insight if this could possible work. Rutherford's original experiment was to find out more about the nucleus of the atom. I don't need to talk about what the results were and what he was able to conclude from them (besides everyone on here knows about it more than I do). But what about this, what if we get the energy of an alpha particle just right so that we can swing it right by the nucleus's of the desired atoms and measure the angel of deflection that the alpha particle undergoes as it passes by the nucleus. Wont the alpha particle be pushed away the hardest when it approaches the imaginary line vertical with the nucleus in the direction that the alpha particle is traveling. Therefore with enough precise data we could measure the point in which the alpha particle is deflected with the greatest angel or path that would tell us where the center of the nucleus is, and with persistence, when the alpha particles travel by the nucleus wont this be right next to, if not on the imaginary line vertical with the center of the atomic radius? Just throwing that out there. It is harder than I thought to explain it in words. But is this reasonable you think?
Just a side question, would quantum rules prevent us from getting the alpha particle exactly where we want it?(Right under, on top, or underneath the nucleus of the desired element so that it passes by it and past it so we can measure the angel with which the alpha particle repels away.)