No, an atom or atoms are concrete nouns; even if you can't see them with the naked eye, they are the building blocks, a part of everything you can see or touch. Atoms can be measured and counted with scientific instruments.
All matter is made up of atoms.
Substances have atoms becasue they are considered the basic building blocks of everything.
Atoms of any element are usually considered to be spherical in shape.
They contain many carbon atoms
carboxalic acid
They contain many carbon atoms
No, a particle is not considered a molecule. A molecule is made up of two or more atoms bonded together, while a particle can refer to a single atom or a group of atoms.
Neither. Atoms are the building blocks that when put together become solids, liquids or gasses.
The bond between oxygen atoms is considered as covalent.
A covalent bond where atoms share electrons equally is considered nonpolar. This occurs when the electronegativities of the atoms are similar and they attract the shared electrons equally, resulting in a balanced distribution of charge.
# Elements are not isotopes, atoms are isotopes of an element. # There are no atoms that are not isotopes, so it's not a matter of being "considered" an isotope or not. # It doesn't matter where the neutrons come from, whatever that means. All atoms are isotopes of some element or other.
Ozone (O3) has a bent molecular geometry, shaped like this: ^. One of the oxygen atoms is considered to be the central atom, and the other two are considered to be terminal or outer atoms.