Can you rephrase the question, please? I think that will help us both.
The molecule for liquid is not specific to one molecule, as liquids can be composed of various types of molecules. For example, water (H2O) is a common liquid, but there are many other liquid molecules such as ethanol (C2H5OH), gasoline, and oil. The state of matter being a liquid is determined by the arrangement and movement of the molecules.
Bromine (Br2) is a brown liquid poisonous diatomic molecule at room temperature.
The inward force among the molecules of a liquid is Surface Tension
It all depends on which molecule you have.
the force between the substance molecule is increased and due to the increasing of the force, the molecule bocome nearer to each other until they form a liquid
No.
Liquid bromine is a monoatomic molecule as it is a liquid
a molecule is a gas,solid, or liquid
Then that molecule will escape the surface of the liquid and become a molecule of gas. This is the process by which water slowly evaporates even when not heated.
A molecule.
Bromine (Br2) is a brown liquid poisonous diatomic molecule at room temperature.
The number of neutrons will depend on what is the liquid. There is no general rule.
Bromine, Br2, is a diatomic molecule that is liquid.
The movement of a molecule's particles in a solid move much less and are more structured than a liquid, and a liquid's particles move less than a gas.The movement of a molecule's particles of solid move much less and are more rigid than liquid, and liquid more so than a gas.
The movement of a molecule's particles in a solid move much less and are more structured than a liquid, and a liquid's particles move less than a gas.The movement of a molecule's particles of solid move much less and are more rigid than liquid, and liquid more so than a gas.
The movement of a molecule's particles in a solid move much less and are more structured than a liquid, and a liquid's particles move less than a gas.The movement of a molecule's particles of solid move much less and are more rigid than liquid, and liquid more so than a gas.
molecule
Liquid