Both are colorless gases.
No, oxygen, hydrogen, and carbon dioxide do not weigh the same. They have different atomic masses, with oxygen being heavier than hydrogen and carbon dioxide being heavier than both oxygen and hydrogen.
Yes!!
No. Hydrogen will easily ignite if it comes in contact if fire. Carbon dioxide is not flammable at all and can even be used to put out a fire.
no
Hydrogen (H2) and carbon dioxide (CO2) are different chemical substances.They are gases with many applications in laboratory and technology.They are NOT. Two totally different gases.
Same thing that happens to you. Not much.
I had this for a science homework question fairly recently and I had no idea what to put. I've found out now thogh, and as the last person's comment was completely useless and unhelpful, I thought I'd tell you the right answers.They are both gases, they are both colourless and they are both tasteless. They are different in the way that Hydrogen is an element, while Carbon Dioxide is not.xxxMia:)xxx Ill keep the above answer as i just wan to add one thing. They are also both oderless meaning they both have no smell.
Carbon dioxide and hydrogen are both non-metallic gases at room temperature. They are both involved in various industrial processes, such as production of chemicals and energy generation. Additionally, they both play important roles in the Earth's atmosphere, affecting climate and weather patterns.
When hydrogen gas reacts with oxygen in the presence of a catalyst, it produces water. Carbon dioxide is a separate compound and does not directly react with hydrogen gas to produce a single identifiable compound.
The main content is the same. Of the wood is carbon and hydrogen, and that of fossil fuels is hydrogen and carbon. So when wood and fossil fuels are burnt the Carbon combines with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide, and the hydrogen combines with oxygen to produce water (H2O). C+O2--> CO2+CO
Hydrogen will effuse approximately four times faster than carbon dioxide under the same conditions of temperature and pressure. This is because effusion rate is inversely proportional to the square root of molar mass, and hydrogen has a much lower molar mass than carbon dioxide.
Yes it is.