Halogens
A chemical family whose members exist as reactive diatomic molecules in the gaseous phase is the halogen family. All halogens are considered as toxic.
(A similar relationship exists in Group 1, which includes hydrogen and the alkali metals. All have the same valence configuration, but hydrogen is never included as a member of the alkali metals family.)
hydrogen has no family on the periodic table.. its a loner
they are grouped in the same family because they react, behave, and act in the same way.
== == There is no answer because hydrogen doesn't even have a family.
The Halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, and Iodine) exist as diatomic molecules, as do hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen.
A chemical family whose members exist as reactive diatomic molecules in the gaseous phase is the halogen family. All halogens are considered as toxic.
The Halogen family.
Hydrogen is not in a group with other families. It actually is in group 1 of the Periodic Table. It is a diatomic atom when it combines with other elements.
They belong to different families but HALOGENS family consists of diatomic molecular elements.
Hydrogen is its own family, with no close relatives.It is in column 1 of the Periodic Table but is not much like any other element. Hydrogen doesn't share common properties with any other group so it is in a family of its own.____On the periodic table hydrogen is placed with the alkali metals. The alkali metals form Group 1. While hydrogen seems different to the other members of this family:it is a gas not solidit forms diatomic moleculesIt does react with the same types of cations to form to form similar compounds. At extremely low temperatures (near absolute zero) it solidifies into a metallic solid.
Hydrogen is its own family, with no close relatives.It is in column 1 of the periodic table but is not much like any other element. Hydrogen doesn't share common properties with any other group so it is in a family of its own.____On the periodic table hydrogen is placed with the alkali metals. The alkali metals form Group 1. While hydrogen seems different to the other members of this family:it is a gas not solidit forms diatomic moleculesIt does react with the same types of cations to form to form similar compounds. At extremely low temperatures (near absolute zero) it solidifies into a metallic solid.
The seven common diatomic molecules are hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine. It is not yet determined whether or not Astatine is diatomic due to its radioactive half life. In its most stable form it only has a half life of approximately 8 hours.
(A similar relationship exists in Group 1, which includes hydrogen and the alkali metals. All have the same valence configuration, but hydrogen is never included as a member of the alkali metals family.)
Hydrogen is placed in group 1, along with alkali metals
the hydrogen is in the first family.
No, hydrogen is considered to be in its own family of elements.