It rotates around it's own axis and revolves around the nucleus. In Hydrogen atom it revolves around the proton.
The electrons typically rotate around the nucleus in the solar system model.
Electrons were generally thought of as individual electrons that rotate around a nucleus; however, they look more like a cloud around a nucleus and are in all places at the same time.
no the only thing located in the nucleus are neutrons and protons. Electrons rotate around the nucleus in orbitals or electron clouds.
An element's nucleus basically contains protons and neutrons. Electrons rotate around the nucleus of an atom.
Protons and neutrons are inside the atom (nucleus). The electrons rotate around the atom.
the electrons revolve around the nucleus which is in the center of the atom, they revolve around it in 7 imaginary energy levels.
NO!!! A proton does NOT circulate around the nucleus. It is part of the Nucleus. Proton(s) together with neutron(s) form the nucleus of an atom; collectively known as 'nucleons'. Electrons circluate around the nucleus as clouds in energy shells. With in the nucleus protons rotate within themselves. They are not static 'lumps' of charge. As an analogy, think of the Solar System. The Sun is the nucleus, and the Sun is known to rotate. The planets are the electrons circulating the Sun and the planets are also known to rotate; think of Earth.
The core of an atom is surrounded by a cloud of negatively-charged electrons that move in various energy levels or orbital shells. These electrons orbit the nucleus, which contains positively-charged protons and neutral neutrons.
Once the electrons hit a spoke of the wheel, The spoke gets heated on one side. This causes the gas next to the spoke to expand. As the gas expands, it pushes the side of the spoke that was heated. This results in the rotation of the wheel.
The Sun does rotate.
i rotate
use the --> and <-- keys to rotate use the --> and <-- keys to rotate