No.
Chemistry has rules (valences and mole values) which must be followed in order for the various elements to "stick together" and form a compound.
22 carbon atoms, 49,010 hydrogen atoms and 5 nitrogen atoms would leave a large amount of hydrogen atoms unattached to anything.
Yes. Carbohydrates usually only contain C, H, and O. The ratio is approximately 1 Carbon to 2 Hydrogens to 1 Oxygen.
it's a fat known as a triglyceride called tripalmitate also known as tripalmitin, which has three molecules of palmitate bound to a glycerol backbone.
18 carbons. = carbo
36 hydrogen = hyd
5 oxygen = rate
Yep!!
Technically yes. It may or may not be a saccharide (sugar), though several disaccharides do have that formula, one specific one being sucrose (table sugar).
NO
yes!
carbohydrate
NO
Yes
c5h10o5
c5h10o5
C5h10o5
Ribose C5H10O5
This is ribose. Its formula is C5H10O5 when uncombined.
ARABINOSE: C5H10O5 is a kind of aldopentoses and a reducing sugar.
Ribulose, C5H10O5 (where the numbers should be subscripts) is a ketopentose.
Xylulose is a monosaccharide containing five carbon atoms, and including a ketone functional group, with the chemical formula C5H10O5.
Deoxyribose, C5H10O4. The sugar in RNA, ribose, has the chemical formula C5H10O5.
The sugar deoxyribose is a component of a DNA nucleotide.
Carbon hydrogen and oxygen: general rational formula CH2O,eg. C5H10O5, C6H12O6 etc.
Carbohydrate