Hydrogen is diatomic. This means that it prefers to form H2. That being said, hydrogen can exist as an H+ ion. These will usually sit in interstitial sites of a crystal lattice. So to answer the question, no, I do not believe an H atom will be found in a solid with its electron attached.
Metallic Hydrogen is thought to exist in the core of Jupiter and Saturn, so yes.
Only one electron exist.
Hydrogen can exist as a positively charged ion (H+) when it loses its electron, or as a neutral atom with no net charge when it has one electron and one proton.
Hydrogen only has one electron orbit, as it only has one electron.
Hydrogen
One. A hydrogen atom contains only one electron, and it is a valence electron.
The simplest atom that contains one proton, one electron, and no neutrons is the hydrogen atom.
Hydrogen has only one electron. Just the one. And it is a valence electron.
Hydrogen electron configuration will be 1s1.
A hydrogen atom has one proton and one electron. The proton is located in the nucleus, while the electron orbits around the nucleus. This balance of one proton and one electron gives hydrogen its neutral charge.
hydrogen (H) and helium (He)
There is one electron in a hydrogen atom. Hydrogen has 1 valence electron and is therefore very unstable by itself. Hydrogen is diatomic, which means that it naturally occurs bonded with another Hydrogen atom: H2