I'm afraid this is all quite wrong. A ground state is
not isoelectronic with the noble gases (unless the atom happens to be a noble gas or an ion like Na
+). An atom has a certain number of electrons - the same as its atomic number - which is usually not the same as a noble gas. The ground state is the lowest energy configuration of these electrons, which may not have a complete outer shell; for example the ground state of K is [Ar]4s
1. If electrons are promoted to a higher level, leaving a lower level incompletely filled, that is an excited state.
Are you familiar with the Aufbau principle? That you fill up the energy levels in order, beginning with the lowest. If the highest level is incompletely filled, simply because of the number of electrons available, that does not make it an excited state. Also, the order of energy levels is not always that of the principal quantum number, e.g. in first-row transition metals 4s is lower than 3d and fills up first. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aufbau_principle.
In example a) you have an electron in 4s, while 3p is incompletely filled. Is this a ground state?
In b) 4f, 5d and 6s are filled, then you have 4 6p electrons. Is this a ground state?
In c) you have a filled 4s and a 3d electron. Remember the point about the order of levels.
Also which atom does each of them describe?
Come on, you can do this. Just count the electrons.