Lightning
No, not if there's enough charge. Clouds in the sky transfer charge to the ground quite readily, without touching. When that happens, we call it "lightning".
Because there is a difference in the charge states of the earth and the clouds, resulting from the static electricity built up by water molecules moving about in the thundercloud. When this difference in charge states is equalized, there is usually a visible arc, which we call lightning.
Electrons are found in electron clouds, which are ouside of the nucleus.
lightning occurs because of a sudden gain of electrostatic discharge by clouds. It is uncertain how exactly the electrical charge forms but it is known that it is caused when clouds crash into each other. Heavier molecules in the cloud carry the charge to the bottom of the cloud. A lot of people think lightning travels either from the ground up or from the sky to ground. Both are true depending on the charge (whether is + or -). There is also cloud to cloud lightning which acts the same way. When the charge is great enough to move through air resistance, it moves or "strikes" it is still sort of one of those 'mysteries'
12 g NF3 equals 0,17 moles.
850,49 g of NF3 = 11,9784 moles
Tetrahedral
Covalent. NF3 is the fluoride equivalent of ammonia (NH3).
NF3 is the correct formula for nitrogen trifluoride.
there are 5 charge clouds found around the central atom in SCl4
there are 10 unshared electrons
Nitrogen trifluoride has the chemical formula NF3.
Lightning
positive charge clouds and negative charge clouds touch and lightning comes down. BUT IT MAINLY IS ZEUS
ž žLightning is caused by the build up of electrostatic charge in clouds Lightning is caused by the build up of electrostatic charge in clouds
NF3.