An electron is not the largest part of an atom. An electron is the smallest component of an atom. Relatively, if a neutron or proton were 1 unit in size, an electron would be 1/1840 units in size.
No, because electrons are just the things around the nucleus. The biggest part is the neutrons and nucleus. These two are bonded together and electrons just go around it. Inside an Nucleus there are Quarks. These quarks are stuck by gluons
Electrons are smallest particles in a atom. Those have negative charge.
No they are not. They are the smallest.
No. The difference between them is that helium atoms have electrons, and alpha particles don't.
What are charged particles that form when atoms gain or lose electrons
A molecule contains atoms e.g. water (H2O) The atoms, ( hydrogen and oxygen, and all other atoms) contain protons, neutrons in the nucleus of the atoms and electrons in energy shells around the nucleus. Protons, neutrons and electrons are sub-atomic particles.
No. The fundamental particles found in atoms are electrons, protons, and neutrons.
Atoms which can be further classified as protons, electrons and neutrons.
The Outermost Electrons are the reactive particles of the atoms.
No. The difference between them is that helium atoms have electrons, and alpha particles don't.
Electrons are these particles.
What are charged particles that form when atoms gain or lose electrons
electrons
electrons
Electrons are the negatively charged particles in atoms. This is not an entertainment and arts question.
When atoms lose or gain electrons, they form ions. These are charged particles.
Yes - all atoms are made of smaller particles. Those particles are protons, neutrons, and electrons.
Neutrons are microscopic particles fount in the nucleus of atoms. Electrons are particles orbiting the nucleus.
Electrons.
atoms