False
in the third shell, an electron has more energy and is further from the nucleus
Exactly what it says. The precise location of an electron cannot be ascertained. The best that can be done is to calculate probabilities that it is found within various locations.
Water is not a linear molecule because of the location of oxygen's electron orbits. The bonding electrons are angled and this results in the shape of the molecule.
Repulsion of the unshared electron pairs (2)and the bonded pairs (2) around the central oxygen atom. Repulsion of these 4 electron pairs attempts to form a tetrahedral shape. Describing the molecular shape, we ignore the unshared electrons and just describe the shape of the molecule based on the location of the atoms, thus bent.
In math, the definition of a location is a point. A point gives a specific position or location on a plane surface.
the most probable location of an electron
This great question is one of the questions in physics that led to quantum mechanics. It turns out that the electron's location cannot be determined with precision. It can only be assigned a probablity associated with it being in a given location at a given time. Furthermore, it is a mistake to think that this is because it is just difficult to do. The electron's position truly is only a probability not matter how carefully you try to measure it.
the most probable location of an electron
Electrons in the electron cloud of an atom are located at specific energy levels. We cannot say with certainty exactly where the electron is physically located at any given moment, and that's because electrons can be at different physical locations at any instant of time. There are quantum mechanical reasons for this, and just one example of the "variability" of location of an electron is quantum mechanical tunnelling.
The Quantum Mechanical model of the atom states that the location of the electrons around the atom cannot be precisely determined. The region where the electron can probably be found is known as the electron cloud.
proton in nucleas, electron in regions of most probable location
Bohr's model explains how electron transitions cause hydrogen's atomic emission spectra. The quantum model is a 3-d view of the atom, which shows an electron's energy levels and sublevels and the probability of an electron's location, proven with complex mathematics.
The word is spelled precise. It means "exact". The teacher demanded to know the precise math answer. The precise location of the accident was at at the corner of Main St. and Hollow Road.
Due to Heisenberg's uncertainty principle one can never know the position of an electron to an arbitrary precision. We can only use quantum mechanical probability densities to estimate it's position. Or we can measure it's location, but that only tells us where it was and can not tell us where it is or how fast it is moving.
The position and momentum of electrons are correlated; if the accuracy of measurements increases one inevitably decreases to the other.
The exact location of an electron can not be known. Electrons' locations can be merely estimated. Electron "clouds" or orbitals are general areas where an electron is likely to be found. There is always uncertainty as to where the electron actually is.
by the butt of it