Hydrogen gains stability by forming diatomic particles (H2). When two hydrogen atoms come together to form a covalent bond (sharing electrons), they both complete the 1s subshell, which makes both atoms happy.
It gains oxygen, loses hydrogen
Lose 3 electrons
Yes
Chlorine atoms have 7 outermost electrons and need to gain an electron to achieve the stability of a full valence shell.
Hydrogen usually loses its single electron to become a hydrogen ion, H+.
gain 1 electron
A: Number one it provide stability for the amplifier or system. The greater the feedback the greater the stability but less gain. In other words gain is inversely related to feedback
R&D, productivity, economic stability, military stability
to gain more stability
A; the stability is a function of gain assuming perfect matched input the range can be from a gain of practically Nil to close to open loop configuration
To gain electronic stability (i.e. stability with respect to their electron configuration)
To gain stability by formation of compounds.
Lose 3 electrons
Acids lose hydrogen ions.
It gains oxygen, loses hydrogen
gain enthalpy of phosphorus
A: The question not very well formulated. But i will try to answer it. Any amplifier will have the maximum gain and the wider bandwidth when it is in a open loop situation. As feedback is added both the gain and the bandwidth will decrease but stability will increase