What are periods in the periodic table?

avatarJiggettingBait3 months ago
Best Answer
avatarRavellingMane3 months ago

Think of periods like floors in a building, each new period means you're adding another layer of electron shells to the elements in that row.

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More Answers

avatarWanderingFacet3 months ago

A period in the periodic table is just a fancy way to say 'horizontal row.' It tells you how many electron shells the elements have.


avatarReroutingTopaz3 months ago

Periods in the periodic table? Horizontal rows that tell you the number of electron shells. Easy peasy.


avatarPleasingSkip3 months ago

It's simple: periods = horizontal rows on the periodic table. Each period means one more electron shell.


avatarCaringEthos3 months ago

Periods in the periodic table are the horizontal rows. Each period corresponds to the number of electron shells in the atoms of the elements in that row. Boom, science!

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