Nitrogen (N2) 78.084 %
Oxygen (O2) 20.9476 %
Argon (Ar) 0.934 %
Carbon Dioxide (CO2) 0.0314 %
Neon (Ne) 0.001818 %
Methane (CH4) 0.0002 %
Helium (He) 0.000524 %
Krypton (Kr) 0.000114 %
Hydrogen (H2) 0.00005 %
Xenon (Xe) 0.0000087 %
the heat in the air rises and the molecule nearest to it at the core the heat in the air rises and the molecule nearest to it at the coreHI the heat in the air rises and the molecule nearest to it at the coreHI BOB the heat in the air rises and the molecule nearest to it at the coreHI BOB vote McCain the heat in the air rises and the molecule nearest to it at the coreHI BOB vote McCain im Zach yates and i approve this message
whe a air molecule bounces of and object it puts force in to the object that it bounce of
it is made by the crashing and the squishing of water molecule and air molecule.
in the air :0
yes it can
Ozone is a tri oxygen molecule. It is formed in a natural process by the action of UV light on oxygen molecule. It is already formed in the air.
anemometers
Air is a heterogeneous mixture of gaseous molecules and solid particulates. Therefore, there is no single size of an air molecule. Most of air are molecules of nitrogen (N2) and oxygen (O2) gas both of which also have different sizes.
It is not an organic Molecule, but a Molecule of 2 Oxygen Atoms. O2 is the Oxygen we breath in air, or more scientifically correct, DiOxygen.
I think a Air molecule is same size as a Water molecule, But I'm not sure.
ozone
? :-(