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Question
an atom with a positive or negative net charge is called an ion. select all of the models of ions. (four diagrams with proton, neutron, electron labels are shown.)
To determine the models of ions, we use the definition: an ion has a net positive or negative charge, meaning the number of protons (positive charge) ≠ number of electrons (negative charge). Let's analyze each model:
Top - Left Model:
- Protons: 4, Neutrons: 2, Electrons: 2.
- Net charge: \( 4(+) + 2(0) - 2(-) = +2 \) (protons ≠ electrons → ion).
Top - Right Model:
- Protons: 5, Neutrons: 3, Electrons: 4.
- Net charge: \( 5(+) + 3(0) - 4(-) = +1 \) (protons ≠ electrons → ion).
Bottom - Left Model:
- Protons: 1, Neutrons: 1, Electrons: 0.
- Net charge: \( 1(+) + 1(0) - 0(-) = +1 \) (protons ≠ electrons → ion).
Bottom - Right Model:
- Protons: 3, Neutrons: 1, Electrons: 1.
- Net charge: \( 3(+) + 1(0) - 1(-) = +2 \) (protons ≠ electrons → ion).
Wait, but maybe I miscounted. Let’s re - check the electron positions (blue dots) and proton counts (yellow +):
- Top - Left: Protons = 4, Electrons = 2 (two blue dots). \( 4 - 2 = +2 \) (ion).
- Top - Right: Protons = 5, Electrons = 4 (four blue dots). \( 5 - 4 = +1 \) (ion).
- Bottom - Left: Protons = 1, Electrons = 0 (no blue dots). \( 1 - 0 = +1 \) (ion).
- Bottom - Right: Protons = 3, Electrons = 1 (one blue dot). \( 3 - 1 = +2 \) (ion).
But maybe the intended analysis is simpler: an ion has unequal protons and electrons. So all four? Wait, no—maybe I made a mistake. Wait, let's count again:
- Top - Left: Protons (yellow +) = 4, Electrons (blue) = 2. 4 ≠ 2 → ion.
- Top - Right: Protons = 5, Electrons = 4. 5 ≠ 4 → ion.
- Bottom - Left: Protons = 1, Electrons = 0. 1 ≠ 0 → ion.
- Bottom - Right: Protons = 3, Electrons = 1. 3 ≠ 1 → ion.
But maybe the original problem has a different count. Wait, perhaps the bottom - left: proton (1), neutron (1), electron (0). So charge +1 (ion). Bottom - right: protons (3), neutron (1), electron (1). Charge +2 (ion). Top - left: protons (4), neutrons (2), electrons (2). Charge +2 (ion). Top - right: protons (5), neutrons (3), electrons (4). Charge +1 (ion). So all four are ions? But maybe the question expects specific ones. Wait, maybe I miscounted electrons. Let's check the electron dots:
- Top - Left: two blue dots (electrons) → 2 electrons. Protons: 4. 4 - 2 = +2 (ion).
- Top - Right: four blue dots → 4 electrons. Protons: 5. 5 - 4 = +1 (ion).
- Bottom - Left: zero blue dots → 0 electrons. Protons: 1. 1 - 0 = +1 (ion).
- Bottom - Right: one blue dot → 1 electron. Protons: 3. 3 - 1 = +2 (ion).
So all four models represent ions because in each, the number of protons (positive charge carriers) is not equal to the number of electrons (negative charge carriers), resulting in a net charge.
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All four models (top - left, top - right, bottom - left, bottom - right) are models of ions. If we assume the options are labeled (e.g., A: top - left, B: top - right, C: bottom - left, D: bottom - right), the answer is A, B, C, D.