Magnesium (Mg) is atomic number 12, so it has 12 electrons. They are configured as follows:
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2, or in an orbital diagram ^v ^v ^v^v^v ^v
There is really nothing to diagram. Magnesium plus oxygen becomes magnesium oxide plus energy.
[well you would show the 2 diffrent particle (oxygen and magnesium) with 1 magnesium particle and 2 oxygen ones attached to it . this is known as MgO2] i believe it is MgO as the electron number is too big to support 2 molecules of oxygen
Hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sodium, magnesium, phosphorus, a bit of sulfur for the amino acid side-chains, chlorine, potassium, calcium, iron, iodine; and another group called trace elements include lithium, fluorine, chromium, manganese, zinc, and just a touch of molybdenum - in that 'Periodic Table" order.
Cobalt: Its atomic number, which equals the number of protons in its nucleus, is 27.
If magnesium and oxygen formed covalent bonds, the illustration would depict shared electron pairs between the two atoms, showing overlapping electron clouds. Instead of representing magnesium as a metal donating electrons to oxygen, the diagram would illustrate both atoms achieving stability through mutual sharing, resembling a molecular structure. Additionally, the resulting compound might be shown as a discrete molecule, such as ( \text{MgO} ), rather than the ionic lattice typical of magnesium oxide.
There is really nothing to diagram. Magnesium plus oxygen becomes magnesium oxide plus energy.
To create an electron dot diagram for magnesium oxide (MgO), start by representing the individual atoms' valence electrons. Magnesium (Mg) has two valence electrons, while oxygen (O) has six. In the diagram, place the two valence electrons of magnesium next to its symbol and the six valence electrons of oxygen around its symbol. Show the transfer of the two electrons from magnesium to oxygen, indicating the ionic bond and forming Mg²⁺ and O²⁻ ions.
See the link below for a diagram.
The chemical formula for magnesium bromide (MgBr) can be represented in Lewis dot diagram form as follows: Magnesium (Mg) with 2 dots (representing 2 valence electrons) and Bromine (Br) with 7 dots (representing 7 valence electrons) sharing one pair of electrons.
In a particle diagram of magnesium reacting with hydrochloric acid, you would see magnesium atoms (Mg) represented by silver-colored spheres, and hydrochloric acid molecules (HCl) represented by green spheres consisting of hydrogen (H) and chlorine (Cl) atoms. As the reaction progresses, you would observe the magnesium atoms losing electrons to form magnesium ions (Mg²⁺) and hydrogen gas (H2) being released.
False. A diagram showing only outer energy level electrons is called an electron dot diagram or Lewis structure. The periodic table is a chart that organizes elements based on their atomic number and chemical properties.
For a neutral magnesium atom, the orbital diagram would show two electrons in the 1s orbital, two electrons in the 2s orbital, and six electrons in the 2p orbital, following the Aufbau principle and Hund's rule. This configuration can be represented as 1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 in the electron configuration notation.
The reaction is: Mg + 2HCL = MgCl2 + H2
its Hydrochloric Acid + Magnesium = Magnesium Chloride + Hydrogen... the Particle Diagram for this is two big cirlces next to 3 littlish squares... + 6 big triangles and 250 tiny circles in a 10cmX10cm square... Well Heres your homework done.
[well you would show the 2 diffrent particle (oxygen and magnesium) with 1 magnesium particle and 2 oxygen ones attached to it . this is known as MgO2] i believe it is MgO as the electron number is too big to support 2 molecules of oxygen
The electron configuration for Magnesium is 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2. You can represent this in a diagram showing the energy levels and the distribution of electrons in each sublevel within the levels.
a frequency diagram.