Hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and the hallogens.
diotomic elements
The Halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, and Iodine) exist as diatomic molecules, as do hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen.
Oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, chlorine, and fluorine all form diatomic molecules.
No its not. there is Diatomic Molecule compounds which consisting of two different element like: CO, NO, MgO, HCl,and HF. however, diatomic molecules are elements that are found in pairs such as: O2,N2,F2,Cl2.
The right side (non-metal side)
Diatomic elements are H, F, O, N, Cl, I, Br and probable At.
Nitrogen, Oxgen and all the halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine and Astatine) exist as a diatomic molcules.
Many gaseous elements form diatomic molecules: hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, as well as vapors of other elements not gasses under standard conditions like bromine, iodine, etc.
There are actually seven elements that fit that description - hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine.
all gases are found in diatomic state. except bromine and iodine
It`s Diatomic
The diatomic molecules in the periodic table are also known as the Fab 7. They are in a row such that they create kind of an upside down L (excluding Hydrogen at the top left): Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine, and lastly, Hydrogen.