Yep. That is true.
hydrogen and oxygen. there are always 2 hydrogrn atoms and 1 oxygen atom joined together by "molecular bonds" giving H2O.
Three are molecules with different elements. Oxygen is not.
Hydrogen bonds are what holds water molecules together. They are made up of two Hydrogen atoms and one Oxygen atom. The electromagnetivity of the Oxygen atoms help make this possible.
The answer is six.
The RBCs shed the oxygen molecules in the capillaries
oxygen gas are indeed composed of molecules... ...molecules of O2 meaning every molecule of oxygen is usually two elemental oxygen atom put together
water
more than one oxygen atom joined together by single covalent bonds
Atomic oxygen is many oxygen atoms (O). Molecular oxygen is lots of oxygen molecules which are each made of two oxygen atoms bonded together (O2).
a compound is many elements mashed together into one. water is H2O and is a compound. H2 for 2 hydrogen molecules, and O for 1 oxygen molecule. Oxygen is an element. When you give 1 oxygen molecule 2 hydrogen molecules it becomes a compound.
Oxygen molecules are not polar, so their are no dipole attractions. Further, there are no hydrogen bonds holding oxygen molecules together. The only real intermolecular force would be dispersion forces.
There are 4 oxygen atoms in two oxygen molecules.
an increase in entropy
Increase in entropy
hydrogen and oxygen. there are always 2 hydrogrn atoms and 1 oxygen atom joined together by "molecular bonds" giving H2O.
Three are molecules with different elements. Oxygen is not.
Hydrogen bonds are what holds water molecules together. They are made up of two Hydrogen atoms and one Oxygen atom. The electromagnetivity of the Oxygen atoms help make this possible.