All orbitals hold a maximum of two electrons, including the innermost s orbital.
Each orbital can hold a maximum of two electrons.
2. The five d orbitals can hold ten in total.
Yes it does. Helium has 2 electrons in the s orbital. A s orbital can hold a maximum of two electrons.
s-orbital = 2e- (s) orbital can hold 2 electrons, each with opposite spin. p-orbital = 6e- (p) orbital can hold 6 electrons in 3 suborbitals, so 2 electrons in each d-orbital = 10e- (d) orbital can hold 10 electrons in 5 suborbitals, so 2 electrons in each f-orbital = 14e- (f) orbital can hold 14 electrons in 7 suborbitals, so 2 electrons in each
Was it Pauli? I'm not positive.
A single orbital can hold up to two electrons.
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Each orbital can hold a maximum of two electrons.
2. The five d orbitals can hold ten in total.
Two.
Yes a single orbital in the 3d level can hold 2 electrons.
Yes it does. Helium has 2 electrons in the s orbital. A s orbital can hold a maximum of two electrons.
2
It hold 6 thre p orbital (Px Py Pz) and each one hold two so total is six electron can p orbital
s-orbital = 2e- (s) orbital can hold 2 electrons, each with opposite spin. p-orbital = 6e- (p) orbital can hold 6 electrons in 3 suborbitals, so 2 electrons in each d-orbital = 10e- (d) orbital can hold 10 electrons in 5 suborbitals, so 2 electrons in each f-orbital = 14e- (f) orbital can hold 14 electrons in 7 suborbitals, so 2 electrons in each
Two electrons of opposite spin
The 2p sub-level can hold a maximum of 6 electrons. The 2p sub-level is divided into 2px, 2py and 2pz. Each of those orbitals can hold a maximum of 2 electrons. There are 3 of them and thus 6 total for the 2p sub-level.