The valence electron. (The outermost electron) help it help s:))))
In the normal sense of "react", no parts meet: The nuclei remain distinct but electons may be shared.
Matter is everything around you. Atoms and compounds are all made of tiny parts of matter. Those atoms go on to build the things you see and touch every day. Matter is defined as anything that has mass and takes up space
Your nervous system.
No,it has to be things you can touch.
It is not possible for two particles to touch (via the Pauli Exclusion Principle, which states that two fermions are not able to occupy the same quantum state); however they will interact. In the case of atoms, assuming that they are not merely nuclei, the electrons will interact first via the electromagnetic or weak force.
In the normal sense of "react", no parts meet: The nuclei remain distinct but electons may be shared.
It just doesn't recognize the touch you made to it. Let the iPod Touch sit for a few seconds, and then try a touch again. Try different kinds of touches until it will react.
You dont touch anything because of atoms Atoms have trouble touching if they touch they explode They can share electrons though but they dont touch
No need-you are atoms as well as anything you touch.
Take it to the Apple Store for repair or replacement.
Yes. Anything that you can touch is made up of atoms.
you
Yes, ALL physical things you can touch are made of atoms.
What we're defining as "touch" really changes at these scales. Atoms are never in physical contact with each other, but the atoms that you are composed of are still bound together chemical and physical forces that make them behave as single units. Those molecules are further bound together into cells, which are them bound together into you. Technically the atoms in you aren't touching the atoms that are in other things, but when you touch something the forces holding your atoms together and the forces holding that thing together are interacting, and that interaction is what we call touching. So the unsatisfying answer is, "Yes, but no." In the literal, atomic-scale sense your atoms never touch any other atoms. However, that's not really what the word "touch" means at human scale, so of course you touch things.
Matter is everything around you. Atoms and compounds are all made of tiny parts of matter. Those atoms go on to build the things you see and touch every day. Matter is defined as anything that has mass and takes up space
To see how you/they react.
Your nervous system.