a compound
A Diatomic molecule contains two atoms.A Homoatomic molecule contains two or more atoms of one element.A Hetroatomic melocule contains at least two atoms of two or more elements.
A compound contains two or more different kinds of atoms bonded together. Examples include water (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2).
A compound is a molecule that contains at lest two different elements. A compound is a molecule because it also contains two or more different atoms.
A molecule contains two or more atoms that are chemically bonded together. These atoms can be identical or different elements that come together to form a distinct structure with its own unique properties.
Yes, also molecules are like compounds, but they can have 2 or more of the same atom.
No, only elements are made of one type of atoms.
A tertiary compound contains three different types of atoms.
A molecule contains two or more atoms that are bound together by exchanging or sharing electrons. These atoms can be of the same element, such as O₂ (oxygen), or different elements, like H₂O (water). The bonds formed can be covalent, where electrons are shared, or ionic, where electrons are transferred between atoms.
Two or more different atoms bonded together is called a compound.
If there are 100 types of atoms, then the number of different compounds that could form by pairing any two atoms is calculated by using the combination formula: C(100, 2) = 100! / [(100-2)! * 2!] = 4950 different compounds.
Yes, two or more different atoms of two or more different elements will, when chemically bonded, make a chemical compound.
All compounds contain more than one element and more than one atom.