to have a proton come out of a nucleus the atom must be a large radioactive element, meaning its so big its unstable and particles come off. the particles that are released is the radiation so the proton is called alpha radiation the energy is purely its high speed momentum. the energy of a proton coming of a nucleus is technically mechanical energy.
nuclear energy
nuclear energy
increases
kijhgtfyrd
No. Energy is emitted when an electron moves to a closer shell (closer to the nucleus).
Drops to a lower energy level and emits one photon of light.
it loses energy
"Absorbed"
The general trend with Ionization energy as you move down a column on the periodic table is that IE decreases. Ionization energy is the amount of energy required to remove an electron from an atom. As you move down a column, the electron moves farther away from the nucleus and the electron shielding effect increases. There is less of a pull keeping the electron in thus making it easier to remove.
The electron gains energy.
The electron gains energy.
when an electron moves from low energy state to high energy state , it gains energy.
Protons all have positive charge, so they repel each other. It takes work to push two protons closer together, so you're putting energy into them (potential energy increases). If you let go, the potential energy is released when the protons fly apart; it becomes kinetic energy.
It gains energy in a quantity amount or whatever it says
It absorbs light
The negatively charged subatomic particle that moves around the nucleus is the electron. The proton, along with the neutron, comprises the nucleus.
the electron will gain energy
No. Energy is emitted when an electron moves to a closer shell (closer to the nucleus).
Drops to a lower energy level and emits one photon of light.
It falls back to its ground state, emitting light of a particular wavelength and color.
An electrons moves from lower energy to higher energy when it is excited.