Want this question answered?
The electron, which moves around the core or nucleus and has a negative charge equal to the positive charge of the protons
Electron
Nucleus, made up of protons and nuetrons. The nucleus. If an atom has positive charge it means one or more electrons has gone missing, leaving a net positive charge due to protons in the nucleus.
The atom's nucleus.
The increasing number of core electrons serve to "shield" the outer electrons from the positive charges in the nucleus. Thus, the effective nuclear charge (Zeff) is reduced.
The center of an atom is called the nucleus.
the atomic core charge of an atom is the same as the number of valence electrons in the atom
the core
I'm not really sure if it's called a HUB, but I do know that the central core of an atom is called the nucleus, and is made out of protons (with a positive charge) and neutrons (with no charge).
The electron carries the negative charge.
You call it the nucleus
electron
The electron, which moves around the core or nucleus and has a negative charge equal to the positive charge of the protons
an atom is generally believed to consist of protons and neutrons situated in the core and electrons moving around this core in circular motions. The neutrons do not have a charge. It should be noted that protons and neutrons are made up of different quarks.
this depends on what you mean the "core". there is a nucleus in an atom which is the very centre where the protons and neutrons are but the electrons spin around the nucleus in shells. the first shell has a maximum of 2 the second, a maximum of a 8 and so on.
electrons are small, negatively-charge particles that are located in the orbitals; positively-charge protons and neutrons (with no charge) reside in the inner core of the atom.
Electron