yes but only in cases when the other variable equals the same.
No more than 10, as there are only five d suborbitals and each one can only hold two electrons at once.
The nucleus of an atom contains only protons and neutrons. Electrons orbit the nucleus.
yes
775 is the only number in all of math that equals 775.
One - 78 can only equal 78.
No, according to the Aufbau principle, the first orbit (K shell) can only hold a maximum of 2 electrons and the second orbit (L shell) can hold a maximum of 8 electrons. This is due to the way electrons fill orbitals in an atom based on their energy levels.
there are two electons in the s sublevel. It is the number of electrons that fit in the first orbital around an atom.
An atom is stable when its outermost orbit, or valence shell, is complete with the maximum number of electrons it can hold according to the octet rule. This typically means having eight electrons for most elements, except for hydrogen and helium which only need two electrons in their outer shell to be stable.
1st orbit - 2 2nd orbit - 8 3rd orbit - 8 all together all three orbits can hold up to 18 electrons.
The first orbital has only an s orbital, which has room for 2 electrons. The second orbital has s and p orbitals, which have room for 2 and 6 electrons respectively. The 3rd orbital has s, p, and d orbitals, which have room for 2, 6, and 10 electrons respectively. Hope that helps
Helium has a total of two orbitals: one s orbital and one p orbital. Each orbital can hold a maximum of two electrons.
Because Helium, as the atom number 2, has only 2 protons in the nucleus, so the element He can 'hold' only 2 electrons in its prime K-orbit. However they should not be referred as 'valence' electrons, because they don't participate in valency (= capable of bonding): the K-orbit is stable and filled up and can NEITHER collect more electrons from NOR it will provide its own pair of electrons to other elements thus making it inert (Helium is a 'nobel' gas)
There is 1 electron in the outer orbit of an atom of lithium. Lithium has 3 electrons, with 2 electrons in the first orbit and 1 electron in the second orbit, which is the outermost orbit.
Each inner energy level of an atom can hold a maximum number of electrons. Electrons orbit around the nucleus of an atom in shells. Each shell has a set maximum number of electrons it can hold, and the shell has to be completely filled before electrons can start filling up the next shell.
The first shell of Neon, known as the K shell, can only hold two electrons. The first shell of any chemical element can only hold two electrons.
The first shell of an atom can hold a maximum of 2 electrons.
Electrons are the only subatomic particles that are not found in the nucleus of an atom. They orbit around the nucleus in specific energy levels.