ionization
The process of removing an electron from a stable nucleus is called electron capture. In this process, an electron is absorbed by a proton in the nucleus, converting the proton into a neutron and releasing a neutrino. This results in a more stable arrangement of particles in the nucleus.
The process of removing a nucleus is called enucleation. A glass needle can be used in the process of removing the nucleus.
The fluorine atom can become an ion by gaining one electron to achieve a stable electron configuration of 8 electrons in its outer shell. This results in the formation of a negatively charged ion known as fluoride ion (F^-).
The process of removing the nucleus from a red blood cell is called enucleation. This process is a natural part of the maturation of red blood cells to enable them to carry oxygen more efficiently.
No. Nuclear fission is a process that involves the nucleus, not electron shells.
Electron capture is a nuclear reaction where an atomic nucleus absorbs an inner-shell electron, converting a proton into a neutron while releasing a neutrino. This process reduces the atomic number by one and keeps the mass number constant.
The weak force converts a neutron to a proton, an electron, and a neutrino; in the process called beta decay.
astable network means it has only one stable state.so the circuit need trigger input to change to another stage and it automatically changes to the previous stage when the process completed with the use of the capacitor.
Removing an electron from an atom is called ionization. This process creates an ion by either losing a negatively charged electron (forming a positive ion) or gaining an electron (forming a negative ion).
Removing hydrogens
Outside the nucleus, free neutrons are unstable and have a mean lifetime of 885.7±0.8 s (about 15 minutes), decaying by emission of a negative electron and antineutrino to become a proton: : n0 → p+ + e− + νe
K capture, a special case of inverse beta decay that doesn't emit a positron (but it does emit an electron neutrino)