No, the tendency is to fill out lower energy levels first.
They have many names. Common ones are orbitals or energy levels.
Since hydrogen only has one electron that constantly absorbs and emits energy while transitioning back and forth through its energy levels, Bohr realized that each of hydrogens orbits was quantized only allowing an electron of specific energy, frequency & wavelength, to occupy it. So he deduced that hydrogen only has a specific line spectum, thus it has specified "orbits" rather than "orbitals" of probability distribution of electrons.
The concept of quantized energy levels, first proposed by Neils Bohr, states that electrons can only exist in certain possible energy levels, which he pictured as orbits around a nucleus since the energy of an electron is proportional to its distance from the nucleus.
Sublevels
one
Energy levels or Energy
Principal energy levels are an atom's major energy levels, ranging in value from 1 to 7. Energy sublevels are contained within principal energy levels, and their number increases as the value of the principal energy level increases.
Bromine has FOUR energy Levels.
Arsenic has 8 levels of energy.
bismuth has six energy levels
Radon (6 energy levels)
Silver has 5 energy levels. 😄
Platinum has six energy levels.
They are smaller in magnitude than those between lower energy levels.
energy
They are smaller in magnitude than those between lower energy levels.