Quite a bit larger!
Electrons are of very small mass and protons, even if just one, plus neutrons are about are 8000 to 10,000 times as large/massive as an electron. These particles make up most of the atom.
it is bigger..so it has more electron in orbit than smaller atom...so it keep simple
A sulfur atom is larger than an oxygen atom.
No, an anion is the atom plus extra electrons which give that atom a negative charge. The anion is thus, always bigger than the original atom.
The radius of an anion is bigger than the radius of a neutral atom.
An anion is larger than its parent atom because it gains electrons, leading to an increase in electron-electron repulsions. This causes the electron cloud to expand, resulting in a larger atomic radius for the anion compared to the parent atom.
An atom is smaller than a compound because if an electron fits in an atom, and an atom is a part of a compound, it means a compound is bigger than an atom
it is bigger..so it has more electron in orbit than smaller atom...so it keep simple
Yes, the electron cloud is typically larger than the nucleus of an atom. The electron cloud is the region around the nucleus where electrons are most likely to be found, and it extends far beyond the nucleus. The size of the electron cloud depends on the energy level of the electron and the type of atom.
A sulfur atom is larger than an oxygen atom.
A cell is larger than a molecule, which is larger than an atom or an electron. Cells are the basic structural and functional unit of living organisms, while molecules are made up of atoms, and atoms are composed of even smaller particles such as electrons.
A chloride ion is slightly larger than a chlorine atom, because in an ion there is one more electron than proton, allowing the electron shells to expand slightly. In a chlorine atom, the number of electrons and protons is the same.
No, an anion is the atom plus extra electrons which give that atom a negative charge. The anion is thus, always bigger than the original atom.
A thorough explanation requires quantum calculations, but as an approximation: A chloride ion is bigger than a chlorine atom because the ion contains an additional electron, but the positive charge of the nucleus is not changed from that of the atom. As a result, the average electrostatic force between the nucleus and each electron is slighter weaker in the ion, so that its electrons equilibrate with a larger average distance from the nucleus than in the atom. (The external dimension of either an atom or an ion is determined by the size of its electron cloud since the nucleus is too far inside the electron cloud to affect external dimension.)
Not at all; the cesium atom is far bigger than the lithium atom.
No. An electron as a particle is small however the probability cloud of an electron can be large- most of the volume of an atom consists of the electron cloud. In relation to this the nucleus, although it contains nearly all of the mass of the atom, is quite small.
Yes, the Cl- ion is larger than the Cl atom because the addition of an extra electron leads to an increase in electron-electron repulsions, which causes the electron cloud to expand. This results in the formation of an anion (Cl-) that is larger in size compared to the neutral atom (Cl).
No, an electron is significantly smaller than a proton, it is approximately 1/1836th the mass of a proton. At a more advanced level, the space taken up by electrons in their shells take up a greater volume in space, but the size of the electron is much smaller than a proton.