Examples of using One electron in English and their translations into Thai
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
You have one electron.
So one electron is going to be in a-- Let's say if this is.
So this has one electron.
You only have one electron in the s subshell of the first energy shell.
And it's going to have one electron in there.
It's got one electron sitting there that it would really just like to get rid of.
Hydrogen only has one electron outside.
So, oxidants are products of oxygen metabolism, the structure of which lacks one electron.
It has one electron there.
Now what does this tell me about, you know, this one has one electron in its outermost shell.
Potassium has one electron in its outermost shell.
This column, right here, which we learned were the alkali metals, this has one electron in its outermost shell.
There's only one electron in a hydrogen atom. Cause, you see.
And if you take oxygen like that and you add it to two hydrogens-- hydrogen has one electron-- what's going to happen?
And actually, you fill one electron here, another electron here, then another electron there.
But then if you look at a periodic table, you would say, you know, cesium has this one electron that it's just dying to give away.
In the case of lithium, you have one electron in your outermost shell, right?
Cause, you see, there's only one electron in a hydrogen atom.
Everything in this first group has one electron in its outermost shell.
So I only have one extra electron.
Such a shield are antioxidants- substances containing one extra electron in their structure, which they easily give off, neutralizing free radicals.
How electrons from one atom interact with electrons from another determines almost everything.