i would guess around 7000
There could be a maximum of 8 electrons in the second energy level (n = 2)
Theoretically, a wormhole would be so unstable that it would collapse if anything, even a single atom or photon, passed through it. However, some theories suggest that adding energy to a wormhole could stabilize it to a point where matter could pass through.
At energy level n=1, the total number of electrons that could be found is 2, as the first energy level can hold a maximum of 2 electrons.
Theoretically, the costs of issuing bonds could be
Not necessarily. The amount of energy transferred by a wire primarily depends on the current flowing through it, not just the number of electrons. The current is determined by both the number of electrons and their speed, so a wire carrying fewer electrons at a higher speed could transfer more energy than a wire carrying more electrons at a slower speed.
Electricity is the movement of electrons. The individual electrons could be called objects, but that would be very unusual.
Helium has only 2 electrons and its energy level is full.
Theoretically it is non-renewable. In practical terms it is almost inexhaustible. IF we could fuse hydrogen isotopes economically
Yes, a highly intense beam of red light could potentially eject electrons from the surface of a metal through the photoelectric effect. The energy of the red light photons would need to be higher than the work function of the metal to overcome the binding energy of the electrons and eject them.
Electrons moved in fixed orbits around the nucleus in Bohr's model of the atom. These orbits were quantized, meaning they had specific energy levels, and electrons could jump between these orbits by either absorbing or emitting energy.
The third main energy level (n=3) can contain a maximum of 18 electrons. This is because the third energy level can have 2n^2 electrons, so for n=3, this would be 2 * 3^2 = 18 electrons.
This value could vary from 1 to 8.