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Question
- subatomic particles can usually pass unreflected through an atom because the volume of an atom is mostly -- filled with protons. filled with neutrons. empty space. filled by an uncharged nucleus.
Subatomic particles pass through atoms mostly undeflected because an atom's volume is predominantly empty space. The nucleus (containing protons and neutrons) is very small, and electrons occupy a tiny fraction of the atom's volume, leaving most of it as empty space. Options about being filled with protons/neutrons or an uncharged nucleus are incorrect (nucleus is charged, and protons/neutrons are in the nucleus, not filling the atom's volume).
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C. empty space (assuming the option with "empty space" is labeled C; if the original labels differ, adjust to the correct identifier with the text "empty space")