Mostly nitrogen and oxygen.
No, Earth's atmosphere is mostly composed of nitrogen (about 78%) and oxygen (about 21%). Hydrogen makes up a very small fraction of Earth's atmosphere, less than 0.1%.
Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen
Earths atmosphere is made up mostly of oxygen and carbon dioxide.
78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen and other gasses make up the last 1% Earth science
mostly carbon dioxide with little or no oxygen.
Oxygen. Earth's early(first) atmosphere is believed to contain hydrogen cyanide, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen, hydrogen sulfide, and water. but still it only had little to no oxygen.
mostly nitrogen with 21% oxygen
no
Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen
No. Jupiter's atmosphere is mostly hydrogen and helium with no free oxygen.
Earths atmosphere is made up mostly of oxygen and carbon dioxide.
78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen and other gasses make up the last 1% Earth science
There is oxygen in the atmosphere of Saturn, but it is only a tiny fraction of the deep atmosphere, which is mostly hydrogen. It is not in a usable form as is oxygen on Earth.
Although the atmosphere of Saturn is mostly hydrogen, that hydrogen cannot burn as Saturn's atmosphere has little or no oxygen. When hydrogen burns it is reacting with oxygen to form water.
No, the earth's atmosphere consists primarily of nitrogen (78%), oxygen (21%), and 1% argon. CO2 is next at about 0.035%, then neon, helium, methane, krypton, and hydrogen.
Earths atmosphere is mostly nitrogen (78%) and Oxygen (21%).It is the oxygen that is the essential gas for breathing.
There is not much hydrogen in the air at all. The air mostly consists of oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon.
mostly carbon dioxide with little or no oxygen.