No
Oxygen is more abundant than hydrogen. In fact it is the most abundant element on Earth.
The three elements more abundant than carbon in the universe are hydrogen, helium, and oxygen. Hydrogen is the most abundant element, making up about 74% of the universe's normal matter. Helium follows, accounting for about 24%, while oxygen is the third most abundant element, constituting around 1% of the universe. Carbon, while crucial for life, is less abundant, making up only about 0.5% of the universe.
Nitrogen is the most abundant element in the earth's atmosphere.
Hematite is composed of oxygen and iron, which is less abundant than aluminum but more abundant than calcium in Earth's crust.
Most of our body is made up of water (H20); therefore hydrogen is the most abundant (i.e. numerous) element and oxygen is the second most abundant. However, since oxygen is much heavier than hydrogen, it comprises a larger percentage of body weight (about 65%) than does hydrogen (about 10%).
Yes, there is more oxygen than hydrogen in terms of weight. This is because oxygen is heavier than hydrogen so even though there may be more molecules of hydrogen, the overall weight is greater for oxygen.
Phosphorus
About 20% more than Oxygen at around 50%.
No, there is more hydrogen on the Jovian planets then the terrestrial ones.
Yes, there is more Hydrogen than anything else in the universe. Most molecules which contain Oxygen also contain Hydrogen, and there is usually more Hydrogen than Oxygen within the molecule already, for example Water, H2O (There are exceptions, such as Oxygen, O2 and Ozone, O3)
There is, for all practical purposes, no hydrogen in the Earth's atmosphere (somewhere around 50 parts per million). Oxygen makes up roughly 1/5 of the atmosphere.So, no. There is much more oxygen than hydrogen in the air.
A carbon-oxygen bond is more polar than a carbon-hydrogen bond, because the difference in electronegativity between carbon and oxygen is greater than the difference in electronegativity between carbon and hydrogen.