Yes. The ozone and water are both molecules.
Yes, H2O and Ozone both are molecules. H20 is water.
Yes, H2O (water) and O3 (ozone) are both considered molecules. A molecule is a group of atoms bonded together, forming a discrete chemical entity. Both water and ozone consist of multiple atoms bonded together in distinct molecular structures.
Ozone layer is created and depleted both by UV. A CFC molecule can destroy up to 100,000 molecules of ozone.
Ozone depletion is the destroying of ozone molecules. These molecules are three atom. All the atons are of oxygen gas.
A reversible reaction is one that "goes both ways" in that the reactants become products, and can react again to become what they were before they reacted the first time. Look at the creation of ozone from oxygen. 3O2 2O3 This says 3 molecules of oxygen (because it's a diatomic gas) will yield 2 molecules of ozone. And, because ozone is unstable, it will undergo a reverse reaction to again become oxygen gas.
Ozone depleting substances, such as water vapor, CFCs (both natural and manmade), and more.
Ozone depleting substances, such as water vapor, CFCs (both natural and manmade), and more.
None. Unless you ozonate water immediately before drinking it, there is almost no chance that will will find ozone in drinking water. It is true that ozone is used in both bottled water processes, and municipal water plants, but in both cases the ozone will have broken down back into oxygen long before that water makes its way into a consumer's mouth.
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are chemicals that are implicated in both global warming and ozone depletion. When released into the atmosphere, CFCs can break down ozone molecules in the stratosphere, contributing to ozone depletion. Additionally, CFCs are potent greenhouse gases that can trap heat in the atmosphere, leading to global warming.
No, there is not a hole in both ozone levels. The stratospheric ozone alone has the ozone hole.
Both are diatomic gases: H2 and O2 but oxygen also has a triatomic variant: Ozone O3
Sugar and water both are ionic compounds. Due to this sugar dissolve into water further sugar molecules breaks into small molecules in presence of water molecules.