No. Oils have less hydrogen atoms as compared to fats. Because oils contain double bonds and fats are saturated.
Most hydrogen atoms don't contain any neutrons. Deuterium atoms are hydrogen atoms with one neutron each, and tritium atoms are hydrogen atoms with two neutrons each, but most hydrogen atoms are protium atoms, with no neutrons at all. All other atoms in the universe except protium contain at least one neutron each.
No.Hydrocarbon molecules contain hydrogen and carbon atoms.It is carbohydrate molecules that contain hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen atoms.
Yes. All materials you will find on earth contain atoms.
No, methane has no polar hydrogen atoms to create hydrogen bonds.
No, because the hydrogen atoms are slightly positive and the oxygen is slightly negative they are attracted to each other by something called hydrogen bonds. It actually gives the water a sticky quality called cohesion.
Yes
Two.
If the compounds only contain carbon and hydrogen, they are called alkanes.
Many, many compounds contain either hydrogen atoms, oxygen atoms, or both. Far too many to list here, in fact.Most prominently water and hydrogen peroxide both contain nothing but oxygen and hydrogen atoms.
12 hydrogen atoms
A water molecule (H2O) contain two hydrogen atoms.
The hydrogen molecule contains 4 Hydrogen atoms, and one Carbon in the centre.