yes, but only sometimes. sorry, I don't know when exactly it is diatomic.
Monatomic, because Barium is a metal from group 2
No.
ahahahaha
Gold has one stable isotope and many radioactive ones.
A diatomic element exists as a molecule containing two of its atoms, such as chlorine (Cl2) and bromine (Br2). Elements that are not diatomic include monatomic elements (noble gases such as Ar, Ne) and triatomic elements (ozone, O3).
Gaseous Sulphur Is probably S8 a unit for Rhombic sulphur and Monoclinic sulphur......
All of the noble gases are monatomic gases: helium (He), neon (Ne), argon (Ar), krypton (Kr), xenon (Xe) and radon (Rn).All the other elements that are gases at room temperature are diatomic (H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2)
diatomic
Nitrogen gas is diatomic.
No they are diatomic
No; it is diatomic.
Barium is monatomic so 56.
ahahahaha
The molecule of nitrogen contain two atoms, is diatomic.
No, F (fluorine) is is diatomic in its elemental form.
No, fluorine is a diatomic gas at STP.
Neither, it is a crystalline solid in pure form.
Gold has one stable isotope and many radioactive ones.
A diatomic element exists as a molecule containing two of its atoms, such as chlorine (Cl2) and bromine (Br2). Elements that are not diatomic include monatomic elements (noble gases such as Ar, Ne) and triatomic elements (ozone, O3).