Duplicate Question
The question on this page has been marked as a duplicate question.
Original Question
Which option correctly describes the pattern of valence electrons on the periodic table?(1 point) Responses The number of valen...Question
                Which option correctly describes the pattern of valence electrons on the periodic table?(1 point)
Responses
The number of valence electrons increases from top to bottom.
The number of valence electrons increases from top to bottom.
The number of valence electrons increases from left to right.
The number of valence electrons increases from left to right.
The number of valence electrons increases from right to left.
The number of valence electrons increases from right to left.
The number of valence electrons increases from bottom to top.
            
        Responses
The number of valence electrons increases from top to bottom.
The number of valence electrons increases from top to bottom.
The number of valence electrons increases from left to right.
The number of valence electrons increases from left to right.
The number of valence electrons increases from right to left.
The number of valence electrons increases from right to left.
The number of valence electrons increases from bottom to top.
Answers
                                                    There are no human answers yet.
                                            
                
                    Answered by
            GPT-4o mini
            
    The option that correctly describes the pattern of valence electrons on the periodic table is:
**The number of valence electrons increases from left to right.**
As you move from left to right across a period, the number of valence electrons in the elements increases. For example, the alkali metals on the far left have one valence electron, while the noble gases on the far right have eight valence electrons (except helium, which has two).
    
**The number of valence electrons increases from left to right.**
As you move from left to right across a period, the number of valence electrons in the elements increases. For example, the alkali metals on the far left have one valence electron, while the noble gases on the far right have eight valence electrons (except helium, which has two).
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.