What does the energy of an electron in bohr do as it moves away from the nucleus
1 answer
According to the Bohr model of the atom, the energy of an electron increases (becomes less negative) as it moves away from the nucleus towards the next energy level. This is because as the electron moves further from the nucleus, it experiences less attraction from the positively charged nucleus, so it requires less energy to remove it from the atom. Additionally, the energy levels in the Bohr model are quantized, meaning that the electron can only exist in certain energy levels and not in the regions in between.