NO!!!! Hydrogen exists as a diatomic gas. (H2 ( H-H) ).
Gas. Unquestionably. Consider the alternative: Liquid? Solid? Maybe plasma? Liquid and solid hydrogen only produced in near the absolute temperature. Plasma on the other hand requires enormous temperature and pressure (Sun).
Plasmas can be thought of consisting of elements that have "lost one or more electron", or become "ionized". Consequently, most plasmas contain a mixture of electrons, and positive ions such as protons. Since protons and electrons could recombine to form hydrogen gas, this mixture of particles is sometimes called a hydrogen plasma, because its components could make up hydrogen, even though there may be no hydrogen present. For more information, see: http://www.plasma-universe.com/
yes. plasma is just a physical state of matter and therefore that matter will have a mass. its what stars are made of; superheated hydrogen. it also exists in fusion accelerators (PBFA - particle beam fusion accelerator) or at the instance that lighting strikes and super-heats the air around the flowing current.
The sun produces energy by fusing hydrogen atoms into helium atoms. This is a nuclear fusion that occurs at the sun's core.
made of plasma
NO!!!! Hydrogen exists as a diatomic gas. (H2 ( H-H) ).
plasma, hydrogen, and helium
plasma
The concentration of hydrogen or hydroxide ions in blood plasma and cell cytoplasm is critical. These hydrogen and hydroxide ions can be combined to form water.
The conditions in the sun's core that allows the plasma state to exist hydrogen nuclei.
Hydrogen is an insulator if it is not ionized. Like any other gas, if a high voltage is applied, electrons separate from the nucleus, creating a plasma, which does conduct. Some experimental fusion generators use hydrogen plasma.
Hydrogen, helium, plasma... that sort of thing.
Plasma by definition is very high temperature.
It is composed of superheated hydrogen and helium plasma.
They ionize (into plasma).
Hydrogen gas in a plasma state is the main component