by the butt of it
There is no exact location of the electron. The electron is outside the nucleus orbiting the center of the atom. You can't see it because it rotates so fast and is so small. So we can't indicate the exact location of the electron.
Around the atomic nucleus, on electron shells.
Yes, it is true.
At the center of the atom lies the proton (+) and neutron (neutral) wither the electron shell orbiting the nucleus. Electrons are negatively (-) charged.
Electron in an atom is represented by electron cloud around the nucleus
There is no exact location of the electron. The electron is outside the nucleus orbiting the center of the atom. You can't see it because it rotates so fast and is so small. So we can't indicate the exact location of the electron.
The location of an electron is circling the outside of an atom.
yes
in the third shell, an electron has more energy and is further from the nucleus
The Quantum Mechanical model of the atom states that the location of the electrons around the atom cannot be precisely determined. The region where the electron can probably be found is known as the electron cloud.
In an electron cloud, which a probability range circling around the atom. Due to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, both an electron's location and speed can not be known at the same time. Therefore, a range is created.
The electron can either be by itself outside of an atom, or can be in an atom in a series of energy 'shells' outside of the nucleus.
I think it's an orbital...
the most probable location of an electron
Electrons orbit the nucleus of an atom. The exact location of a specific electron, however, can not be known for certain. The general area where the electron might be found is in its orbital.
the most probable location of an electron
Around the atomic nucleus, on electron shells.