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You think probable to ionosphere.
Geometric Probability
Probability is related to statistics in a direct manner. When one is doing a research for statistics, probability has to be used especially in sampling a small region.
You divide the area of the shaded region by the area of the full circle. For example, if the radius of the shaded region is 2 meters, the probability would be 4pi / 36pi, or 1/9. If the shaded region is a 'slice' of the circle, the chance is just the fraction of the circle which the 'slice' is.
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The region of zero electron density is called a "node."
atomic orbital
atomic orbital
Electron Cloud
false
You think probable to ionosphere.
That depends on how it's drawn. It may give some idea of the probability of finding an electron in a given location, or it may just show the region of space where the electron is likely to be found. If it looks like a bunch of individual dots, the density of the dots gives some indication of the probability (the closer together the dots are in a region, the higher the probability of finding the electron in that region). If it looks like a solid object (or a collection of solid objects), it's just the region(s) where the probability is over some value.
The region around an atomic nucleus where an electron is likely to be moving.
The electron cloud. The atomic radius roughly describes the distance from the nucleus to the electron cloud.
This is the electron cloud.
Electron cloud on a+
None. You can use 80% or 95 or 99%. The reliability of your estimates will change in response.