All the electrons in an atom form the so-called cloud of electrons.
When all electrons in an atom are in orbitals with the lowest possible energy, the atom is in its ground state. This is the most stable arrangement for the electrons in an atom.
All atoms have electrons, but not in the nucleus.
No, the electrons orbiting an atom have multiple levels.
All electrons are the same. A negatively charged atom would be an anion.
A fluorine atom has seven valence electrons, as do all halogens.
That would be called the atom itself since it consists of the nucleus and one or more electrons
Almost all of the volume of an atom is the space between the nucleus and the electrons.
that would be an ion
One Mn atom contains 5 electrons in it's 3d subshell, all of which are unpaired.
Approximately all of the atom's mass is in the nucleus. The electrons contribute almost zero.No atom has more than 100 electrons, but eachproton or neutron in the nucleushas the mass of more than 1,800 electrons.
---------They are all alike because they all are located in an atom or around an atom=P
The nucleus of an atom contains protons and neutrons. Valence electrons are the outermost electrons in an atom that participate in chemical bonding. The electrons in the inner energy levels, excluding the valence electrons, are referred to as core electrons.