Yes. According to Einstein, the mass of an electron can be converted into energy, which will then dissipate. The famous E=mc2.
inner shell electrons : the electrons that are not in the the highest occupied energy level .
Hydrogen shares its electrons to complete the octate so it gains 1 electrons. it can also its electrons.
Valence Electrons
Everything is made up of atoms and atoms contain electrons. Therefore I suppose that technically yes you do eat electrons as everything you eat has electrons in it.
phosphorus will accept 3 electrons or share 3 electrons
no energy cannot be created or destroyed
Subatomic particles, that is neutrons , protons, and electrons are indeed never destroyed or created in chemical reactions.
They are destroyed in "K capture" decay when a proton in the nucleus captures an electron, becoming a neutron.They are destroyed in matter-antimatter annihilation when they meet a positron, a gamma ray photon is emitted.
Without a bit more guidance on the specific topic, it's hard to know how to answer. You might say that energy is generally transferred and not destroyed, or that in chemistry electrons are transferred but not destroyed, or atoms in chemical reactions, or ...
When a strong positive charge outside the atom attracts them.
When the bodies are rubbed against each other one body transffers electrons to the other body. Since there are no new electrons produced or destroyed the charge is equal.
Matter can not be created nor destroyed during any process, so no matter can not be destroyed during a chemical change.
Assuming you meant atoms, no it is not. The atoms are broken into their constituent particles (IE. protons, neutrons, and electrons) but no matter is lost.
I think you mean, "Can they wear out?" And by that, do you mean they just run out of energy like a battery? Remember that energy cannot be made or destroyed. Electrons are constantly being transferred and so even if they leave one area, they are not really gone. and they do not just die out. They just move on to the next thing, forever.
destroyed = zerstört destroyed = verwüstet
Yes, it does. It must, because current is composed of physical electrons, which aren't created or destroyed, so the count of electrons entering and leaving each source, and flowing through the circuit, must all tally up.
Organisms can be destroyed by ozone. These are destroyed by the UV.