No, Uranium has far more electrons.
In a neutral atom number of electrons=number of protons=atomic number.
Hydrogen has 1 electron. Uranium has 92.
NO!!!! Hydrogen has only ONE(1) electron Uranium has NINETY TWO(92) electrons.
No. Hydrogen has 1 electron. Uranium has 92.
yes
Yes, it is true.
Uranium is not more reactive than magnesium. Magnesium is more reactive than uranium. Magnesium reacts with water to form magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen gas, while uranium is relatively stable and does not react as readily with water.
Oxygen has more electronegativity than hydrogen because it has more protons in its nucleus, which creates a stronger positive charge to attract electrons. Additionally, oxygen is smaller in size than hydrogen, which leads to stronger electron-nucleus attraction.
Yes, the density of hydrogen gas is lower than that of uranium hexafluoride gas. Hydrogen gas is one of the lightest elements, while uranium hexafluoride gas is much denser due to the heavy uranium atom.
The hydride ion (H-) is more stable than the hydrogen atom (H•) because the extra electron in the hydride ion helps to stabilize the negative charge through electron-electron repulsion. Additionally, the hydride ion benefits from a full electron octet, making it more stable compared to the hydrogen atom, which has an unpaired electron.
Oxgen has more electromotive magnetic than hydrogen because elements always wants to fill up their electron shells. This is used in science.
A hydrogen only has one valence electron, while oxygen has 6.
A hydrogen atom can not form more than one bond, because a hydrogen atom contains only one electron.
The nucleus and the electron both revolve around a common center of charge. The only atom with equal charge in both places is hydrogen. Every atom heavier than hydrogen has more charge in the nucleus than there is on an electron. By the time you get to uranium, there is more than 90 times as much charge in the nucleus as there is on an electron, so the common center of charge is many times farther from each electron than it is from the nucleus. Also, each nuclear particle ... each proton and neutron ... is almost 2000 times more massive than an electron, and the same argument applies to the center of mass in the case of orbits governed by gravitational force, such as the solar system. But in the atom, the electrical forces completely dominate over the gravitational forces (by something like 1040.)