Ozone is not an example of resonance (by all possible meanings). It does have two bonding forms that it occasionally changes between. These two forms are called resonant states... but the bonding does not "resonate" per se.
they don't.
true
ozone layer is the big example
Yes, ozone is matter. It is a layer of ozone molecules.
Each atom in ozone is connected to another atom by 1.5 bonds. Scientists previously believed that a molecule such as ozone switched rapidly back and forth between its different resonance forms. More recent experiments have shown that the molecule actually assumes the average of all the resonance forms, with the electrons delocalized.
There are 2 resonance structures for ozone.
they don't.
true
No. Ozone is bonded without a complete "cycle", thusly: O-O=O with a resonance form O=O-O.
ozone layer is the big example
Yes, ozone is matter. It is a layer of ozone molecules.
Sulfur dioxide has three resonance structures. A singly bonded oxygen would have 3 unshared electron pairs while a doubly bonded oxygen would have 2. The sulfur has one pair.
Resonance
yes
Each atom in ozone is connected to another atom by 1.5 bonds. Scientists previously believed that a molecule such as ozone switched rapidly back and forth between its different resonance forms. More recent experiments have shown that the molecule actually assumes the average of all the resonance forms, with the electrons delocalized.
ozone layer can be used in a sentence. one example is "OZONE IS A TRIATOMIC GAS".
the THERMOSPHERE