That pic might be a little confusing, I got that pic off a British site. XD 3σ might be another way to say σ
*sp. Also, don't take my explanation too seriously because my knowledge of MO theory is rather limited. If someone sees something wrong, don't hesitate to correct it.
Here might be a better pic:
From this pic, you can see 6 non bonding electrons.
Let's first talk about the definition of a non-bonding orbital. They have the same energy as the atomic orbital they were derived from. They're below anti-bonding orbitals in energy, and above bonding orbitals.
Non-bonding orbitals result when atomic orbitals cannot overlap because of dissimilar orientation.
The H-F sigma bond is formed from an electron from H1s and an electron from F2p
z. Now the left over 2p
x and 2p
y can't overlap with H orbitals. A sigma bond results when you have head-to-head overlap (on the internuclear axis, which is usually defined as the z axis). The remaining p orbitals are on the x and y axis so they don't have the proper spatial orientation to overlap with H1s. 2s is also left over so you have 2 nonbonding fluorine 2p orbitals and 1 nonbonding 2s orbital. You can probably imagine that these 3 non-bonding orbitals keep the characteristics of the fluorine atomic orbital