2,i think.look at the Periodic Table to make sure,ok.hope i kind of helped.
Hydrogen usually loses its single electron to become a hydrogen ion, H+.
No, hydrogen (H) has one electron in its outermost level.
Only 1 electron needed to make H stable.
How many* and it has 1 electron in it's outer shell, and only has the 1 shell.
It is simple: 1s^1 Note: The "^" symbol means the the following number is in the form of a superscript.
One neutral hydrogen atom contains one electron.
Hydrogen is a non metal element. There are 1 electrons in a single atom.
H (Hydrogen)
To find the frequency of gamma radiation from mega electron volts, you can use the equation E = h*f, where E is the energy in electron volts, h is Planck's constant, and f is the frequency. By converting mega electron volts to electron volts and rearranging the equation, you can solve for the frequency.
only one proton means only one electron, therefore, electron config is 1 or 1s1 when acting as a non-metal in an ionic sustance H- has an electron config of 2 or 1s2
H-O-H Four altogether. Two per sigma bond. One electron from the hydrogen ( it's only one ) and one from the oxygen. in two seperate sigma bonds.
The element Hydrogen (H) has only 1 electron. When it loses it, it becomes the Ion H+.