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If oxygen combines with water, the result is hydrogen peroxide. Of course, the oxygen does not necessarily react. You can also just get water with dissolved oxygen.
Acid rain I believe.
No. Simply mixing hydrogen and oxygen will not get you water. You must burn the mixture.
Oxygen is already mixed in water. Water is made up of two molecules of Hydrogen and one molecule of Oxygen (H2O) oxygen mixes in water through the process of diffusion. these are then used by the aquatic organisms... * * * * * The first part is about chemical composition, NOT mixing. The second paragraph is the correct answer.
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If oxygen combines with water, the result is hydrogen peroxide. Of course, the oxygen does not necessarily react. You can also just get water with dissolved oxygen.
They are not attracted to each other because one is polar and one is nonpolar.
They are not attracted to each other because one is polar and one is nonpolar.
They are not attracted to each other because one is polar and one is nonpolar.
Water can not be produced by mixing these to gases, when hydrogen gas is burn in oxygen atmosphere the vapours of water are produced.
by mixing 2 elements of hydrogen and oxygen. (H2O) this is the recipe for water.
Oxygen is dissolved in water. Some things such as water movement and air currents/ wind aid in the mixing process. Also, aquatic plants release oxygen into the water.
Acid rain I believe.
No. Simply mixing hydrogen and oxygen will not get you water. You must burn the mixture.
water is a substance, made of oxygen and hydrogen, because mixing ox and hyd would give nothing but explosion, water is an effect of chemical reaction, not only mixing gases
No. Oxygen is a reactant in combustion, not a product.
If you could create an apparatus that would allow oxygen to be introduced from the bottom of a container filled with water, and allowed the oxygen to displace the water, pushing the water out of a valve of some sort at the bottom, you would prevent any air from mixing with the oxygen (picture an upside down flask). It would take some engineering, but the theory is sound.