Yes Yes
A molecule made up of two atoms is called a diatomic molecule. A diatomic molecule can be composed of two of the same atoms, called a diatomic element. Hydrogen gas, H2, is an example of a diatomic element. A diatomic molecule can also be a compound composed of two atoms of different elements, such as carbon monoxide, CO.
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO it is a Diatomic Molecule would be 02, if your doing a science online quiz I would bee glaad to help you with it
Oxygen is the atmospheric molecule required for the complete breakdown of glucose. This process, known as cellular respiration, occurs in the presence of oxygen to convert glucose into energy, carbon dioxide, and water.
Oxygen occurs naturally as a diatomic molecule with a double covalent bond. Each oxygen atom shares two electrons to form the O2 molecule, creating a stable arrangement with a full set of valence electrons.
NO!!!! Methane contains 5 atoms , not 2 atoms (diatomic) Methane has the formula ' CH4' ; one carbon and four hydrogen atoms, so it may be thought of as 'pentatomic',
covalent bond
Carbon is an element which does not tend to form diatomic molecules; it has a variety of different forms such as graphite, coal, or diamond, but all of these are characterized by very large aggregations, not diatomic molecules.
Oxygen has a diatomic molecule - O2.
Diatomic or Diatomic Molecule- meaning containing only two atoms.
Just two atoms - either the same (as in O2) or different, as in CO (carbon monoxide)
not diatomic, singular
A diatomic molecule has 5 degrees of freedom.