Hydrogen has one shell with only 1 electron on the valance shell.
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All elements in the first period have 1 shell. That's hydrogen and helium.
potassium is more reactive because it has more outer shells of electrons than hydrogen. more outer shells means a weaker pull from the positive proton. this means it is easier to lose an electron with a weaker pull from the proton
Uranium has seven electron shells.
Sodium, i believe has 3 shells.
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Hydrogen has only one valence electrons.
All elements in the first period have 1 shell. That's hydrogen and helium.
One. In nature, however, hydrogen forms a diatomic bond making it found as H2.
This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a periodic table.
The n = 2 level of hydrogen can hold eight total electrons--6 in the p shells and 2 in the s shells.
No, hydrogen has a total of one electron shell because it only has one electron.
No. Hydrogen is extremely unreactive because it only has one valence electron.
Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, and Iodine
Their are only 2 shells in the hydrogen atom.
The first electron shell of any element is the one s shell. Every element except hydrogen has 2 one s electrons.
A "red giant" star can fuse both hydrogen (in the star's outer shells) and helium (in the core).