The diagonal rule is a method for determining the order in which electrons fill sublevels of energy levels of atoms when doing electron configurations.
Yes i am a 15 year old sophomore girl in chemistry class from a tiny school in Texas, but im sure my awnser is correct. (point is, if i get it you should)
Well, the diagonal rule goes like this
S= 2
P=6
D=10 F= 14
the numbers that are with the letters represent what energy levels (also known as the rings electrons are on).
those are the energy levels
that's not right!
it's like this
1s
2s 2p
3s 3p 3d
4s 4p 4d 4f
5s 5p 5d 5f
6s 6p 6d
7s 7p
8s
THE DIAGONAL RULE MUST GO IN THIS ORDER:
1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, 4d, 5p, 6s, 4f, 5d, 6p, 7s, 5f, 6d, 7p, and 8 s. These orbitals will account for all the elements now known.
This diagonal rule can help account for the octet rule, too.
EXAMPLE:
element: neon
electrons: 10
electron configuration for neon:
1s^2 , 2s^2 , 2p^6
so on the first energy level you will have 2 electrons and on the second you will have 8.. you total adds up to 10
hope that helped :)
TIP!!!!
if you write it in the sideways Christmas tree pattern as I did, and if you draw it in rows like I did with al of the variables (like the "s") straight down, then start with 1s and draw diagonal lines pointing downwards from right to left. Start at the top and work your way down the arrows as you fill up energy levels. When you get to the bottom of one, go to the top of the next line. I hope this tip helped because it helped me!
It's because the diagonal line on each trapezoid cuts down on the error of your area estimation. It is the average of the left and right rules.
diagonal
The address of the Diagonal Printing Museum is: 101 East 1St Street, Diagonal, IA 50845
The diagonals are perpendicular to one another. The shorter diagonal is bisected by the longer diagonal. The kite is symmetrical about the longer diagonal. The longer diagonal bisects the angles at each end of the diagonal.
Use Pythagoras: Diagonal² = √(2 × sidelength²) → diagonal = side_length × √2 → diagonal = 10 cm × √2 ≈ 14.1 cm
It's because the diagonal line on each trapezoid cuts down on the error of your area estimation. It is the average of the left and right rules.
Two elements that have configurations that are apparent contradictions to the diagonal rule are chromium and copper. These elements have electron configurations of [Ar] 3d5 4s1 and [Ar] 3d10 4s1, respectively, instead of the expected [Ar] 3d4 4s2 and [Ar] 3d9 4s2 configurations based on the Aufbau principle and diagonal rule. This is because having a half-filled d orbital (in the case of chromium) or a fully filled d orbital (in the case of copper) provides greater stability than the predicted configurations.
diagonal
A diagonal is a line so the area of any diagonal must be zero.
The answer depends on what information you do have about the rhombus. Assuming that you know the length of the sides and one of the diagonals, then,In the triangle formed by the given diagonal and the sides of the rhombus, you know all three sides. So you can use the cosine rule to calculate the angle between the sides of the rhombus.The other pair of angles in the rhombus are its supplement.So now you know two sides and the included angle of the triangle formed by the missing diagonal and the sides of the rhombus.You can use the cosine rule again to find the missing diagonal.
Oh, dude, a circle doesn't have a diagonal because it's a round shape with no straight sides. It's like asking for the corner of a circle - just not a thing. So, yeah, no diagonals in circles, but nice try!
A diagonal cannot be a side of a rectangle, and a side cannot be a diagonal.
Use Pythagoras: Diagonal² = √(2 × sidelength²) → diagonal = side_length × √2 → diagonal = 12 × √2 ≈ 17.0 units
Kitty-corner is another term for diagonal. A right triangle's hypotenuse is on a diagonal. On a keypad, the five is on a diagonal from the nine.
The address of the Diagonal Printing Museum is: 101 East 1St Street, Diagonal, IA 50845
Using Pythagoras: diagonal² = side² + side² = 2 × side² → side² = diagonal² ÷ 2 area = side² = diagonal² ÷ 2 → diagonal² = 2 × area → diagonal = √(2 × area) = √(2 × 36) = 6√2 ≈ 8.49
The diagonals are perpendicular to one another. The shorter diagonal is bisected by the longer diagonal. The kite is symmetrical about the longer diagonal. The longer diagonal bisects the angles at each end of the diagonal.