No, helium does not bond with anything.
Helium
covalent bond
Covalent Bond
Hydrogen bonding holds together the two strands of a double stranded DNA. Hydrogen bonding exists between the nitrogen base pairs.
There are several types of bonds that hold parts of a three-dimensional molecule together. One is a hydrogen bond, which is a weak bond that forms when a positively charged hydrogen atom is attracted to a strongly negatively charged ion. Another is a covalent bond, which is a strong bond formed when atoms share electron pairs.
The bond holding the diatomic molecule of hydrogen (which exists in hydrogen gas) is a single covalent bond. This is the sharing of one electron in their 1s orbital, forming an stable electron that of helium: 1s2
A weak hydrogen bond, adenine and thymine have a double hydrogen bond cytosine and guanine have a triple hydrogen bond
Hydrogen an oxygen, both being nonmetals, will be held together by a covalent bond.
The polar covalent bond between the hydrogen and oxygen atoms holds it together.
helium is after haydrogen it means hygrogen is lighter than helium. now the question arises that "Q.1"why we use helium instead of hydrogen coz hydrogen is lighter than helium. Ans.1:hydrogen has 1 electron in its 1st shell and helium has it's complete shell with two electron. When we fill hydrogen in the baloon they form ionic bond... so it is used double...
Helium
It is gravity.
Covalent Bond
covalent bond
a hydrogen bond holds two atoms of hydrogen together.
The sun is fusing hydrogen atoms together, turning them into helium.
Hydrogen is what gets fused together to form Helium.