1s, 2s, and 2p
One only - 1s.
What a bizarre question! The pure orbitals are on the hydrogen atom and the carbon 1s orbitals. Butane is C4H10- so 14 "pure orbitals". The carbon atoms all have four sp3 hybids- so 16 hybrid orbitals. Ration is 14:16.
some atoms have 5, some have none. the max is 5
7
The 1s, 2s, 2p and 3s
There are 9 occupied orbitals in a phosphorus atom's ground state: one 1s orbital, one 2s orbital, three 2p orbitals, one 3s orbital, and three 3p orbitals.
lithium atom is just a ball it has 1s and 2s orbitals both of which are spheres the 1s is occupied by two electrons and the 2s one electron
One only - 1s.
1s, 2s, and 2p
One only - 1s.
One only - 1s.
3: 1s, 2s, 2px
Sulfur has two electrons in the 1s orbital, two electrons in the 2s orbital, and 6electrons in the 2 p orbitals. The electrons are part of the first and second energy levels, the electron core. The next energy level, the last one, is the outermost energy which comprises the valence shell.
Nitrogen has 5 valence electrons. Valence electrons are the electrons that are found in the outer most shell of an atom, and are consequently the electrons that move from atom to atom in the formation of compounds. The reason for this is a result of the electron configuration. A nitrogen atom has 3 orbitals; the 1s orbital, the 2s orbital, and the 2p orbital. In this case, the 2s and 2p orbitals are the valence orbitals, as they have the electrons with the most energy. With 7 protons, a neutral nitrogen atom has 7 electrons. The s orbitals can only hold 2 electrons, and the p orbitals can hold up to 6 electrons. The 1s orbital is filled first, leaving five electrons, then the 2s orbital is filled, leaving 3 electrons, and then these remaining electrons fill the 2p orbital halfway. There are a total of 5 electrons in the 2s and 2p orbitals, and since these orbitals have the most energy, there are 5 valence electrons.
4 electrons. First orbital is the 1s which has 2 electrons. Second orbital is the 2s which has 2 electrons.
Shells: 3 Orbitals: 9