an oxygen and a hydrogen atom do not weight the same
No all oxygen atoms do not have the same mass as you can get isotypes of the same element which are still called the same except that they can have more or less neutrons than the standard model this is why the weight is refered to as an average mass
Hydrogen and oxygen are two completely different elements. When combined in a chemical reaction, two hydrogen atoms (H2) combine one oxygen atom to form a molecule of water (H2O)
No. A Hydrogen atom has 1 proton and 1 electron with the electron arrangement 1. An Oxygen atom has 8 protons, 8 neutrons and 8 electrons with the elecron arrangement 2. 6.
Hydroxyl and hydronium are NOT the same. Hydoxyl is OH- and hydronium is H3O+
Hydrogen : 1.00794Oxygen : 15.9994The atomic weight of oxygen is 15.9994, and the atomic weight of hydrogen is 1.00794. Therefore, an oxygen atom weights about 15.87 (almost 16) times the weight of a hydrogen atom. So if you have the same number of atoms of each, the weight of the oxygen will be about 16 times the weight of the hydrogen, which is what you have (64g is about 16 times 4g). Therefore, H2O and HO2 are impossible, but HO is possible. (I am not the original writer)
Hydrogen atoms are the smallest known elements, and therefore smaller than oxygen atoms (according to atomic weight and atomic mass).
No all oxygen atoms do not have the same mass as you can get isotypes of the same element which are still called the same except that they can have more or less neutrons than the standard model this is why the weight is refered to as an average mass
Hydrogen and oxygen are two completely different elements. When combined in a chemical reaction, two hydrogen atoms (H2) combine one oxygen atom to form a molecule of water (H2O)
No. A Hydrogen atom has 1 proton and 1 electron with the electron arrangement 1. An Oxygen atom has 8 protons, 8 neutrons and 8 electrons with the elecron arrangement 2. 6.
They have the same amount of hydrogen. All water molecules have two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
Hydroxyl and hydronium are NOT the same. Hydoxyl is OH- and hydronium is H3O+
Hydrogen : 1.00794Oxygen : 15.9994The atomic weight of oxygen is 15.9994, and the atomic weight of hydrogen is 1.00794. Therefore, an oxygen atom weights about 15.87 (almost 16) times the weight of a hydrogen atom. So if you have the same number of atoms of each, the weight of the oxygen will be about 16 times the weight of the hydrogen, which is what you have (64g is about 16 times 4g). Therefore, H2O and HO2 are impossible, but HO is possible. (I am not the original writer)
This is one atom of oxygen in a molecule of water. There are two atoms of hydrogen in that same molecule.
The oxygen atom has 6 electrons in its outer shell, while the oxygen atom has 1 electron. The two hydrogen atoms share their electron with the oxygen atom, when this happens, the oxygen atom becomes a negative charge, while the hydrogen becomes positive charged. Opposite charges attract, thus a molecule of water is formed.
An oxygen atom has 8 of each neutrons, electrons, and protons. While a carbon atom has only 6 of each. I had the same problem! So i hope this helped :)
An element is only made of the same type of atoms. Ex. oxygen is an element, and it is only oxygen atoms, nothing else. If there's both hydrogen and oxygen atom it is H2O, which is a compound.
No, H2O is made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.