your mom is found in the shell of an atom.
shell (orbits)
Valence electrons in an atom are found in the outermost energy level or shell of the atom.
An electron shell is the outermost shell in an atom. This is where you'll find bounding power in the atom. Atoms in the last column of the periodic table have the full outer most shell and are most stable.
The outermost occupied energy shell of an atom is the valence shell, and it varies depending on the atom. It can be determined by looking at the period the atom is in on the periodic table.
An atom doesn't have a "shell" at all. Electrons orbit an atom at different layers each called a "shell", so your answer is no.
The valence shell is the outermost shell...and an atom can only have one outer shell.
Ammonia is a molecule (NH3) and not an atom.
The valence shell is the outermost shell of the atom. For example, hydrogen (which is located on Period 1) has only one shell and it is its valence shell. Another example, bromine (which is located on Period 4) has four electron shells, and its fourth shell (counting away from the nucleus) is its valence shell containing seven electrons.
The very inner shell of an atom is the 1st shell and can only contain 2 electrons.
an electron of an atom, located in the outermost shell (valence shell) of the atom, that can be transferred to or shared with another atom.
The outer shell of an atom is the valence shell, which contains the valence electrons.
Valence shell