No. Any significant amount of hydrogen that may have existed either escaped the planet or else combined with oxygen in the atmosphere to form water molecules.
hydrogen,helium,oxygen and fultide dion.
Hydrogen is in atmosphere.We get it from air.
Yes, hydrogen and air can mix. However, hydrogen is highly flammable and when mixed with air in certain concentrations, it can form an explosive mixture. This is why caution is needed when handling and storing hydrogen in the presence of air.
Yes. You cannot get water from hydrogen alone. You need oxygen. Since oxygen is a part of the atmosphere, simply burning hydrogen in air will give you water vapor. Passing an electric current through water will split it back into hydrogen and oxygen.
100% of hydrogen is lighter than air
A hydrogen balloon rises in air because the hydrogen gas inside the balloon is lighter than the surrounding air. This makes it buoyant, causing it to float upwards. The difference in density between the hydrogen gas and the air creates an upward force, lifting the balloon off the ground.
It is called hydrogen
Helium, hydrogen, and air are gases.
air
it is not gas it is just air
Hydrogen is a type of gas. Hydrogen is part of water, which is two parts hydrogyn and one part oxygen.
First take test tube (an empty test tube) hydrogen is colorless ,tasteless and odorless. (it is also very light that why weather balloons are filled with hydrogen). Then put a burning splint at the mouth of the test tube and you know that there is hydrogen in the air because hydrogen burns with a pop when it is mixed with air so now you know that there is hydrogen in the air.