energy levels
the paths of moving electrons are called rings or shells
There is sort of no answer to that question, because electrons do not "dart" in "paths". The word the question is looking for is "orbital", but the question itself is misleading.
no. the current theory is that the electrons move randomly in the outer most part of a molecule in part called the "electron cloud" which is just swirling mass of electrons with no predictable path
The protons and neutrons are at the centre in a mass called the nucleus and the electrons revolve around the nucleus in circular paths called orbits.
nope
the paths of moving electrons are called rings or shells
Actually each energy level is considered to be a shell and the electrons are moving in the shell (in fixed paths).
Niels Bohr
found in regions called orbitals
Electrons are said to occupy orbitals, around the atomic nucleus. They do not actually orbit in the manner that planets orbit the sun; they spread themselves out, as an electron cloud, and surround the nucleus rather than moving in an orbit.
There is sort of no answer to that question, because electrons do not "dart" in "paths". The word the question is looking for is "orbital", but the question itself is misleading.
All atoms of all elements have electrons in the electron cloud (better known as orbitals). The concept of orbits (electrons moving in fixed paths) is now replaced by orbitals.
niels bohr
You are PROBABLY referring to the "Bohr Model" of the atom.
Negative charged
no. the current theory is that the electrons move randomly in the outer most part of a molecule in part called the "electron cloud" which is just swirling mass of electrons with no predictable path
The protons and neutrons are at the centre in a mass called the nucleus and the electrons revolve around the nucleus in circular paths called orbits.