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Such a particle is called a molecule.
Usually that's a covalent compound, and the representative particle is called a molecule.
This is a molecule.
Sugar is glucose (C6H12O6) (Oh, I wish I could make the numbers small) Which means it has (per particle) 6 Carbon atoms, 12 Hydrogen atoms and 6 Oxygen atoms.
No. Chemical changes can only result in rearranging representative particles (atoms, molecules, formula units.) They can't break down atoms any farther than, well, atoms.
A water molecule (H2O) contain two hydrogen atoms.
This depends on the chemical formula of this substance !
There are 12 atoms of hydrogen in a particle of glucose
Hydrogen exists as H2 which is a molecule. There are thus two atoms present.
Such a particle is called a molecule.
There are 12 atoms of hydrogen in a particle of glucose
They're similar in that they're both representative particles. However, their key difference lies in the fact that an atom is an representative particle of an element, and a molecule is a representative particle of a molecular, or covalently bonded compound.
H - Hydrogen Smallest particle with formula H2O is water molecule and is composed of two atoms of hydrogen and one that of oxygen. two atoms of hydrogen incidentally combined to make one hydrogen molecule. Thanks, Dilip Thakur
No. a neutron is a subatomic particle found in the nuclei of all atoms except for hydrogen-1.
Yes, two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom make a water particle. H2O
Usually that's a covalent compound, and the representative particle is called a molecule.
Neutrons are electrically neutral particles present in atoms except in hydrogen-1 isotope.