8
First shell is 2 and then all the others have a maximum of 8
Eight.
8
8
8
The electron configuration of an element shows the number of electrons in their energy levels and orbitals. For example, the electron configuration of a neutral magnesium atom, Mg, with 12 electrons, is 1s22s22p63s2. This means that there are two electrons in the s orbital of the first energy level, two electrons in the s orbital and six electrons in the p orbital of the second energy level, and two electrons in the s orbital of the third energy level. The number in front of each letter represents the energy level, the letter represents the orbital, and the superscripts represent the number of electrons in the orbital.
That is twice the frequency. Frequency is equal to the number of complete cycles which pass a point per second.
The mantissa must be a number in the interval [1, 10).
60 second it per hour
Aluminum has the highest boiling point across period 3. Aluminum is a metal with metallic bonding. The strength of the metallic bonding depends upon the number of delocalized* electrons in the metallic structure. Because of the three delocalized electrons in aluminum, Al (aluminum) has a very high boiling point.*delocalized: free electrons (in the structure).
2s^2 2p^6 So, eight.
While there is no "highest number" as numbers themselves can increase infinitely, the second highest named number is a centillion.
There is no highest number, highest prime number, or highest composite number. Therefore, there can't be a second-highest, third-highest, etc., of any of these types of numbers, either.
8
Which sub level the electron is in.
Oxygen has the second highest electronegativity of any element, second only to fluorine. Since it would be unusual to have fluorine in the electron transport chain, we can safely expect that oxygen will have the highest electronegativity in the chain.
No.
No
No
The maximum number is 8 electrons in the second shell.
Brazil has the second highest number of Christians in the world. France has the second highest percentage of Christians in the world. --source: Adherents.com
l = 1