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Oxygen is given off in photosynthesis.Oxygen is utilized in respiration.It acts as last electron acceptor.
its called a beta particle, but its an electron
Electron transitions release photons.
ok, so electron affinity is the amount of energy given off when a particular atom excepts electrons. Essentially, it is the likelihood that an atom will accept an electron, while ionization energy is how much energy is needed to take an electron off of a particular atom
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Beta
Oxygen is given off in photosynthesis.Oxygen is utilized in respiration.It acts as last electron acceptor.
its called a beta particle, but its an electron
Beta radioactivity radiation.
Electron transitions release photons.
No, a delta particle is not a fast moving electron given off by a nucleus during radioactive decay. The electron described here is a beta particle, and specifically a beta minus particle. It is given off in (no surprise) beta minus decay. A link to a related question can be found below.
Beta Particles
Hydrogen has only one electron on one shell.
One part of a beta- particle. The other part is an electron antineutrino
ok, so electron affinity is the amount of energy given off when a particular atom excepts electrons. Essentially, it is the likelihood that an atom will accept an electron, while ionization energy is how much energy is needed to take an electron off of a particular atom
A lot of the time, it's photons (light).