The electrons in an atom can tell you many things about the element such as:
~the atomic number
~number of valence electrons
~what column the element is in
ex:
Because if fluorine is element number 9 then there are 9 electrons.
Not quite sure but i believe if it's stable or not.
The electron configuration of hassium is: [Rn]5f14.6d6.7s2.
The electron configuration of the element with the atomic number 39 (yttrium) is: [Kr]4d15s2.
The element with that electron configuration is Iron.
Sulfur (S) has the electron configuration 1s22s22p63s23p4.
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p3 is the electron configuration of element 15.
The electron configuration of hassium is: [Rn]5f14.6d6.7s2.
The electron configuration of the element with the atomic number 39 (yttrium) is: [Kr]4d15s2.
The element with that electron configuration is Iron.
The electron configuration of sulfur is [Ne) 3s2.3p4.
Sulfur (S) has the electron configuration 1s22s22p63s23p4.
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p3 is the electron configuration of element 15.
The electron configuration of phosphorus is [Ne]3s2.3p3.
The electron configuration of americium is [Rn]5f7.7s2.
[He] 2S2 is the noble gas electron configuration for beryllium.
The answer is nitrogen. Nitrogen is one example of an element that has the same valence electron configuration as phosphorus.Ê
The electron configuration is the number of electrons in each energy level of an element. The electron configuration of Li is, 1s2 2s1. The electron configuration of F is, 1s2 2s2 2p5.
Beryllium would have that configuration