No more than 10, as there are only five d suborbitals and each one can only hold two electrons at once.
either introduce a form of foot hold periodically or cut out steps into the slope other then that can only turn it into multi level retaining walls and level tiers
Click and hold the balloon when it's big - then follow it.
You put your device flat on a table or just hold it parallel with the floor. Then slide the door to the right.
I can solve this question . But i think it is better to hold on . I want to register my finding with my name.
First energy level can hold 2 electrons.Second energy level can hold 2 + 6 = 8 electrons. Total = 10 electrons.
The third energy level of an atom can hold eight electrons.
The second energy level of atoms can hold a maximum of 8 electrons.
The first energy level can hold 2. The second level can hold 8. The third level can hold 18. Fourth and beyond can hold 32.
Each energy level can hold different number of electrons. The first energy level holds 2, second holds 8, and third holds 8. Because the first two energy levels of sodium can only hold 10 electrons, the sodium has a third energy level to hold the 11th electron.
8 I think
Maximum of 8 electrons in second energy level.
8 maximum
16 maximum
two
A stairway is a good model for the energy levels in an atom because there is a 'main floor' ( the nucleus ) and steps ( the energy levels ). The nucleus is the start of the stairway of the energy levels, and the other energy levels go off of the nucleus. The first energy level can hold 2 electrons, the second energy level can hold 8. The third energy level can hold 18, and the fourth energy level can hold 32 electrons. In order for an element to be as stable as a noble gas, the outermost energy level has to be full, so sometimes an atom will gain or lose electrons to fill it's outer energy level. Other times it might share electrons with other atoms, so that they don't have to gain or lose a lot of electrons. An example of this would be H2O ( water ). There is one oxygen atom with two hydrogen atoms connected to it, and sharing their electrons with each other.
The first level can hold 2, the second can hold 8, and the third can hold 18 electrons. However, the outer level never holds more than 8; therefore an atom containing only 3 levels will have only 8 in the 3rd level.