Yes. Hydrogen reacts very easily with many other elements.
Individual hydrogen atoms are stable in so far as they do not decay, they are however very reactive chemically and they can easily become stabilized by bonding two hydrogen atoms each other to form a hydrogen molecule. Meanwhile, hydrogen reacts with many other elements including metals, metalloids and non metals.
Water is chemically H2O and there is no helium (He) in water. Water has two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
Chemically, Oxygen is a stand-alone element, where as water, or H2-0, is a compound of 2 Hydrogen and 1 Oxygen. Realistically, Oxygen is an invisible gas, while H2-0, with the addition of 2 Hydrogen atoms per Oxygen atom, liquifies and becomes visible.
atoms of hydrogen and oxygen chemically combined to form water
Atoms that chemically combine form a molecule.
Ammonia (NH3) has 3 hydrogen atoms. N is nitrogen.
hydrogen atoms
Bases combines easily with hydrogen atoms
You don't need to, they'll do it on their own. Individual atoms of hydrogen are not chemically stable and will spontaneously recombine.
Individual hydrogen atoms are stable in so far as they do not decay, they are however very reactive chemically and they can easily become stabilized by bonding two hydrogen atoms each other to form a hydrogen molecule. Meanwhile, hydrogen reacts with many other elements including metals, metalloids and non metals.
Yes, hydrogen and oxygen atoms form covalent bonds when they chemically combine.
An ion.
Yes, it is called a hydrogen molecule. It is a molecule because it is composed of two hydrogen atoms chemically bonded, which has the formula H2.
Type your answer here... water is the componant of two hydrogen and one oxygen atoms that's why we name it as H2O.
If you're looking for examples, nitrogen is one (two hydrogen atoms chemically bonded together).
They don't readily give or recieve hydrogen atoms.
They chemically bond together t form molecules of H2O.