Yes, because an atom in an excited state will normally give off energy and go to a less-excited state or to its ground state. Some atoms have long-lived excited states and are called "metastable".
The exciting of an electron takes in energy. The fall back to the ground state releases that energy as a photon. The photon is created by the return to the ground state.
An atom will go into an excited state when the electrons are given extra energy. Then after the electrons have been excited it will eventually go back to ground state producing a light as it returns to its normal state.
It goes back into the soil.
Yes. When electrons go from a higher energy orbital to a lower one, they release photons (ie: light).
The Sun. And also: when electrons go from excited state back to ground level, the energy that they had transforms into light which is given off.
The electrons travel to ground.
The Sun. And also: when electrons go from excited state back to ground level, the energy that they had transforms into light which is given off.
No, the electrons go back to the transformer they came from where they are pushed again by the changing magnetic field, thus reentering the cycle.
back ground chck on diamond markee godfrey
Yes, because an atom in an excited state will normally give off energy and go to a less-excited state or to its ground state. Some atoms have long-lived excited states and are called "metastable".
The exciting of an electron takes in energy. The fall back to the ground state releases that energy as a photon. The photon is created by the return to the ground state.
Ten years?
Soaks into the ground or back to the ocean.
Into a container in the plane where it can be removed when the plane is back on the ground.
you have to go under ground and get fossils and go back up and go to overaburgh city
Simple answer: Valence electrons losing energy. Expanded answer: Atoms, the most basic unit of matter, contain charged particles call electrons and protons, along with neutral particles called neutrons. Protons and neutrons are found in the nucleus of an atom. Electrons are arranged in specific areas called shells (or orbits). When the electrons are excited (for example, by heat), they jump from one shell to another. Once they fall back they start to emit photons--light. Each element has a different color based on how many valence electrons it has.