Yea this makes me happy I love talking about bonds Here is a explanation since there is no question.
In the ionic bond that creates sodium fluoride, for example, the element sodium loses one of its 11 electrons to balance the 9 electrons in Fluoride because the ionization energy of sodium (the charge required to lose an electron) is low.
Glad to help
Have a wonderful day
Curium (Cm, 96) – Pierre and Marie Curie einsteinium (Es, 99) – Albert Einsteinfermium (Fm, 100) – Enrico Fermigallium (Ga, 31) – both named after Gallia (Latin for France) and its discoverer, Lecoq de Boisbaudran (le coq, the French word for 'rooster' translates to gallus in Latin)hahnium (105) – Otto Hahn (Dubnium, named for Dubna in Russia, is the IUPAC-accepted name for element 105)lawrencium (Lr, 103) – Ernest Lawrencemeitnerium (Mt, 109) – Lise Meitner<span>mendelevium (Md, 101) – Dmitri Mende</span>
<span>obelium (No, 102) – Alfred Nobel<span>roentgenium (Rg, 111) – Wilhelm Roentgen (formerly Ununumium)</span><span>rutherfordium (Rf, 104) – Ernest Rutherford </span><span>seaborgium (Sg, 106) – Glenn T. Seaborg</span></span>
Answer:
I think the first one
Explanation:
I'm not really sure but i count it