Examples of using One electron in English and their translations into Serbian
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Latin
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Cyrillic
One electron.
Hydrogen has just one electron.
One electron circles one proton.
Hydrogen has one electron only.
In the light-dependent reactions,one molecule of the pigment chlorophyll absorbs one photon and loses one electron.
From the hydride electron pair, one electron is transferred to the positively-charged nitrogen of the nicotinamide ring of NAD(P)+, and the other hydrogen transferred to the carbon atom opposite this nitrogen.
Hydrogen has only one electron.
Sodium only loses one electron, so its charge is +1 in the above example.
A hydrogen atom has only one electron.
Francium has one electron has one electron.
A hydrogen atom only has one electron.
As a part of the decay process, one electron with an energy of up to 315 keV and two gamma rays with energies of 1.17 MeV and 1.33 MeV are emitted.
Has one proton and one electron.
The first ionization energy is the energy it takes to remove one electron from an atom, the second ionization energy is the energy it takes to remove a second electron from the atom, and so on.
Each of the photons carry enough energy will normally free exactly one electron, resulting in a free hole.
You always see only one electron at a time.
And I wanted to go one step further, andI wanted to move one electron on and one electron off.
Cause, you see, there's only one electron in a hydrogen atom.
It still bonds with its silicon neighbor atoms, but in a sense,the phosphorous has one electron that doesn't have anyone to hold hands with.
Hence both atoms become ions as one atom has one electron less, while the other has an extra.
Each photon with enough energy will normally free exactly one electron, resulting in a free hole as well.
It bonds with its silicon neighbor atoms having valency of 4, but in a sense,the phosphorous has one electron that doesn't have anyone to bond with.
The flavin group is capable of undergoing oxidation-reduction reactions, andcan accept either one electron in a two-step process or two electrons at once.