Most astronomers estimate the number at somewhere between 1070 and 1090.
4 electrons, 2 valence electrons
Germanium has 32 electrons.
Xenon has 54 electrons.
Argon has 18 electrons.
Roentgenium has 111 electrons.
somewhere around 4*10^184 planck cubes could fit in the obervable universe and those are a lot smaller than electrons. So that number would be somewhere between a googol and this number.
Not in this universe.
It is the most stable element in the universe and does not need anymore electrons. Its outermost energy level is full.
There are infinitely many of them and I have neither the time nor energy, and the universe does not have enough electrons to provide an answer.
As of our current knowledge, there are 118 known elements on the periodic table, each with a specific number of electrons. The electron is a fundamental particle, and there are trillions upon trillions of electrons present in the universe, making it impossible to provide an exact count.
Protons and neutrons are formed in the cores of stars through nuclear fusion, while electrons are present in atoms since the beginning of the universe. They are essential building blocks of matter and are created through natural processes in the universe.
The universe is organized in a hierarchical structure from largest to smallest as follows: universe, observable universe, galaxy, solar system, planet, moon, and then down to subatomic particles like protons, neutrons, and electrons.
There are an infinite number of them and there are not enough electrons in the whole universe to list them all.
8 electrons
Actually a galaxy is in a universe
it is a random splitting of atoms made of protons and neutrons and electrons if they split the universe willexplode.
Any body in the universe is never said to be rest as the electrons inside it keeps moving to and fro and thus no matter on the universe is in standard rest.