Bromine has a larger radius (not raduis) than chlorine.
It is He.
idk if this is an answer but this is what i found in my book. atomic raduis increases down a group and decreases across a period
Barium has a radius (not raduis) which is almost twice as large as that of silicon.
The length of a radius (not raduis) is diameter/2.
The radius (not raduis) is approx 60,268 km.
No, it cannot be a raduis. It cannot be a radius, either.
The radius (not raduis) is 1.25 cm.
The radius (not raduis) is 6 inches.
The radius (not raduis!) is 3.183 cm, approx.
There is no such word as raduis. The radius of 64 depends on what 64 is a measure of!
Radius (not raduis) =circumference/(2*pi)
Barium has a larger atomic radius than silicon. This is because atoms tend to increase in size as you move down a group in the periodic table due to the addition of more electron shells. Barium is in a lower group than silicon, resulting in a larger atomic radius.