Valance electrons are not located near the nucleus. These electrons are in fact located the furthest away from the nucleus compared to other electrons.
Potential energy. Potential energy = mass * gravitational constant * height As you see, the further the electron is from the nucleus ( how " high " it is ) the more energy it contains. So, that would be the outer valance electron(s).
Because the nucleus draws the electrons into it.
The electrons placed near the nucleus.
binding energy The attraction force of the positively charged protons in the nucleus binds (holds secure) the negatively charged electrons near the nucleus.
electrons
electrons are outside the nucleus of an atom they have the highest energy very near to the nucleus and as they are getting far the energy is decreasing
No. The electrons nearest the nucleus have the lowest energy. The highestenergy electron is one that's out on its own, not bound to any nucleus.
electrons are outside the nucleus of an atom they have the highest energy very near to the nucleus and as they are getting far the energy is decreasing
in the chromatin, which is near the nucleus
It is in cytoplasm.It is located near to nucleus.
No element could possibly fit this description. There are WAY too many electrons and no where near 201 particles in the nucleus.
i believe its ribosomes