The nucleus has a width on the order of 10^(-15) meters, while an electron is (on average) a distance of 10^(-10) meters from the nucleus. If you were to magnify the nucleus to the size of a Baseball, the electrons would be orbiting at a distance of around 1000 meters. That is, there are about 50,000-100,000 nucleus diameters to the electron's average radius.
5, electron, proton, neutron, nucleus, and electron cloud.
Electrons are the particles that circle the nucleus of an atom.
No. The greater distance from the nucleus the more energy an electron has.
nucleus
The answer simply depends on the environment that the electron is in. If the electron is in orbit around the nucleus of an atom then there will be a strong electromagnetic force acting on the electron towards the nucleus.
5, electron, proton, neutron, nucleus, and electron cloud.
None, electrons are in the electron cloud, not the nucleus
A nucleus with too many protons is just a positive ion. It can absorb an electron to create the original atom.
The farther an electron is from the nucleus, the greater its energy.
nucleus is in the middle and the electron cloud is around it
Electrons are the particles that circle the nucleus of an atom.
Electron in an atom is represented by electron cloud around the nucleus
Darmstadtium has seven electron shells around the nucleus.
An electron is what orbits the nucleus. The nucleus is made of protons and neutrons
The particle not found in the nucleus is the electron
An electron in a 2s orbital is on average closer to the nucleus.
Electrons are found in the electron cloud that surrounds the nucleus.