Yes, O2 is a molecule.
O2 is the diatomic molecule of oxygen.
it is a molecule with two oxygen atoms..
There are 16 electrons in an O2 molecule. Each oxygen atom contributes 8 electrons, totaling 16 electrons in the molecule.
The subscript 8 tells you that there are 8 atoms of carbon in one molecule.
Oxygen (O) is an element, while O2 is a molecule composed of two oxygen atoms bonded together. So, O2 is a molecule, not a compound.
No, C13H18O2 represents the chemical formula for a molecule containing 13 carbon atoms, 18 hydrogen atoms, and 2 oxygen atoms. It does not specify a specific molecule but rather the elements and their quantities present in a theoretical compound.
It's Oxygen but in gas form. Such as N2 is nitrogen gas. But just N is nitrogen.
There is more hydrogen because H2o, stands for 2 hydrogen molecules with one one 02 molecule
It comes from H20, the Oxygen molecule joins with another 0 molecule to form 02, the H+s enter the thylakoid space from the stroma
No, O2 is a molecule. However there are oxide ion (O2-), the peroxide ion (O22-), and the superoxide ion (O2-).
Cl2 represents a molecule of chlorine gas, O2 represents a molecule of oxygen gas, and H2 represents a molecule of hydrogen gas. These chemical formulas indicate the number and type of atoms present in each molecule.
The chemical equation represents the reaction of 2 molecules of dihydrogen (H2) and 1 molecule of dioxygen (O2) to form 2 molecules of water (H2O). In total, this reaction involves 6 atoms of hydrogen (2 in each H2O molecule) and 2 atoms of oxygen (1 in each O2 molecule).