Yes because oxygen is always found in nature in pairs.
Yes. A diamotic molecule is a molecule composed only of two atoms.
Yes, the molecule of oxygen (and the molecules of other gaseous elements) is diatomic; but ozone contain 3 oxygen atoms.
Yes, oxygen, as many other gases, has a diatomic molecule.
Oxygen (O2) has a diatomic molecule; the allotrope ozone has 3 atoms.
Oxygen has a diatomic molecule and ozone a triatomic molecule.
But also monoatomic oxygen exist.
Yes, O=O
yes
diatomic
Nitrogen gas is diatomic.
Sulfur is not diatomic. It forms S8 molecules rather than S2.
It groups in pairs, usually noted as H2. You might be wondering why? The answer to this is Hydrogen atom is too unstable to exist as single atom as the valence electron state is unsaturated. Hence it exists as H2
The name of diatomic anion consisting of oxygen and hydrogen.
diatomic
Nitrogen gas is diatomic.
No they are diatomic
No; it is diatomic.
yes, but only sometimes. sorry, I don't know when exactly it is diatomic.
ahahahaha
The molecule of nitrogen contain two atoms, is diatomic.
No, F (fluorine) is is diatomic in its elemental form.
No, fluorine is a diatomic gas at STP.
Oxygen is a diatomic gas.
Oxygen typically consists of two-atom molecules (O2) but can also exist in a monatomic (single atom) state or as a three-atom molecule (O3) called ozone.
Oxygen has a diatomic molecule - O2.