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.
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.
H (Hydrogen)
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+.