An electron shell can hold 2(n^2) electrons (technically) where n is the shell number, i.e. shell 1 can hold 2, shell 2 can hold 8, 3 holds 18 and so on.
The atomic number of Nitrogen is 7, i.e. it has 7 electrons (to match its 7 protons, assuming it isn't an ion).
With the atomic number, you simply start from shell 1 and work out. So we put 2 electrons in shell 1, leaving us with 5 left. Shell 2 can hold 6 so we can fit all 5 in.
In other words, you should have 2 electron shells on the atom, shell 1 with 2 e- and shell 2 with 5 e-.
Answer: The gravitational acceleration on planet X is 5 N/kg
On Earth (with the gravitational accelartion g_E) the mass of 2kg will correspond to
On planet X we are told the same measure is only 10N. Since there is a proportional relationship between g and F, we can calculate g_X:
32? I could be wrong but I’m going with that answer choice