It isn't. By definition a compound consists of two or more elements. Ozone consists only of one element: oxygen. It is considered an allotrope.
There are three on Earth. Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Ozone.
Ozone is a molecule. It is the triatomic form of oxygen.
No. A molecule of ozone is 3 oxygen atoms.
O3 is a molecule / compound, not element
Ozone is a molecule, neither a solution nor a mixture. In the ozone layer, it is one component of a mixture of gasses.
Ozone is neither a compound or atom, a compound is two or more different elements chemically combined, and an atom is a single small particle of an element. Well ozone's chemical formula is O3, so ozone is a molecule (two or more elements chemically combined, that are the same or different).
An ozone molecule (O3) is considered a compound because it is made up of two different elements, oxygen (O) and forms a distinct molecule with a fixed ratio of their atoms. Each oxygen atom forms a covalent bond with the other two oxygen atoms, making it a chemically distinct substance.
Covered in the wikipedia entry for ozone. Ozone was identified and named by Christian Friedrich Schönbein in 1840. The molecule's components were identified by Jacques-Louis Soret in 1865.
The Sun's light breaks the chlorine (or bromine) form the molecule, forms a temporary compound with something else, and ozone attacks that molecule and releases the chlorine (or bromine) again.
Ozone is a molecule. Its formula is O3.
Yes, ozone is a polar molecule.
Ozone is the only compound which has only three atoms of oxygen.