There are two hydrogen/oxygen atoms in each molecule of hydrogen/oxygen.
One mole of oxygen and one mole of hydrogen both contain the same number of atoms. This number is referred to as Avogadro's constant, 6.022 E23.
They both consist of 6.02214179*10^23 molecules and atoms.
They both exist naturally in states of O2 and H2. and they both occupy about 22.4 L per mol
Both are colourless, odorless, and both are non - metals, basic, but maybe they'll help :)
Oxygen and Hydrogen
Oxygen and Hydrogen
A hydrogen atom has 1 proton and an oxygen atom has 8
A single oxygen atom is smaller than a molecule.
None. A water molecules contains one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms. Oxygen only contains oxygen.
Oxygen and Hydrogen
Oxygen and Hydrogen
A hydrogen atom has 1 proton and an oxygen atom has 8
Water, H2O, is a molecule of hydrogen and oxygen. It is considered a compound. That said, yes, oxygen and hydrogen combine to make a compound that is represented by the molecule H2O.
A single oxygen atom is smaller than a molecule.
Hydrogen peroxide is a molecule and a compound because it consists of two elements, hydrogen and oxygen.
Water. H2O. Two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen.
There are three atoms in a molecule of water. One oxygen atom and 2 hydrogen atoms. The simplified form for the molecule of water is H2O which is a coded form for the 2 hydrogen and 1 oxygen atoms that make up the molecule.
Because the hydrogen molecules are further apart than the oxygen so move quicker.
None. An oxygen molecule contains two oxygen atoms and nothing else.
Under normal conditions, an oxygen molecule, which contains two oxygen atoms, does not attach to two hydrogen atoms. In a water molecule, which consists of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom, both covalent bonds between oxygen and hydrogen are polar, with the oxygen end of the bond more often negative than either of the hydrogen ends.
This is one atom of oxygen in a molecule of water. There are two atoms of hydrogen in that same molecule.