The partial pressure of hydrogen gas can be calculated by subtracting the partial pressure of helium from the total pressure. Therefore, the partial pressure of hydrogen gas would be 161 mm Hg (600 mm Hg - 439 mm Hg = 161 mm Hg).
To convert Torr to mm Hg, divide by 1.33. So, the partial pressure of helium in mm Hg is 439 Torr / 1.33 = 330 mm Hg. To find the partial pressure of hydrogen, subtract the partial pressure of helium from the total pressure: 600 mm Hg - 330 mm Hg = 270 mm Hg. Hence, the partial pressure of hydrogen gas is 270 mm Hg.
Assuming that you mean Hydrogen, its formula is H2, hydrogen is diatomic molecule
Hydrogen is a type of gas. Hydrogen is part of water, which is two parts hydrogyn and one part oxygen.
H2S is the formula of Hydrogen sulfide.
hydrogen is kind of like a powerful gassy texure which mean that it is a gas and it has a gassy texure
There is one electron per hydrogen atom, and two atoms per molecule of hydrogen. So if you mean hydrogen gas, there are two electrons.
Root mean square velocity is the measure of the velocity of gas particles that is used for solving problems. It is the square root of the average velocity-squared of the molecules in a gas. The formula for root mean square velocity is sqrt(3RT/Mm) where Mm is the molar mass of the gas in kg / mole, R is the gas constant, and T is the temperature in kelvin.
If source you mean, fuel...then the answer is Hydrogen gas. The sun fuses to hydrogen atoms to create helium.
I assume you mean this reaction. Mg + 2HCl -> MgCl2 + H2 That is hydrogen gas being given off. ( H2 )
When hydrogen gas reacts with fluorine gas, the product formed is hydrogen fluoride (HF) gas.
No, Hydrogen is a gas. The verb "fly" can not be applied to a gas.