The world may never know......
Each electron has its own "address."
by the number of electrons in its outermost shell
The element does have a magnetic moment. This is because there is one pair of electrons and two individual electron molecules in the valence shell. This is to say that the unpaired electron molecules create a magnetic moment. That is sulfur's magnetic property.
Chemical properties of an element determine by the number of electron
A potassium atom "always" loses exactly one valence electron when it reacts with another element, because one valence electron in a potassium atom has a much lower ionization energy requirement than any other electron in the same atom. (This property is generally ascribed to the fact that when a potassium loses exactly one electron, it acquires the very stable electron configuration of the noble gas argon.) A chlorine atom has a very strong attraction (its electronegativity) for exactly one electron, which gives the charged atom the electron configuration of an argon atom. Therefore, when a potassium atom is close enough to a chlorine atom, one electron is transferred between to form an ionic bond and a formula unit of the compound potassium chloride.
the oil drop experiment postulated unit charges or electrons
an electron is not a property at all..
This property is the deflecton in an electrical field.
Orbital and spin motion of electron
No an electron does not have a net charge of 0, in fact it has a net charge of -1.
Each electron has its own "address."
each electron has its own "address"
A county assessor is responsible for tracking property ownership and the location of land partials. They also handle determination of property values for taxation purposes.
This category covers establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing instruments and apparatus that measure an optical property
by the number of electrons in its outermost shell
In my opinion quantum nos are those which defines the property of electron.
(a)electron sea