Oxygen (O2)
Water has three atoms: two hydrogen and one oxygen. If you mean more that two types of atoms, then look at sugar (body sugar, to be specific), which has 6 carbons, 12 hydrogens, and 6 oxygens. To take it to extremes, proteins can contain hundreds of atoms in one molecule.
As the name implies, So2 is comprised of two sodium atoms.
Water. H2O. Two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen.
No, water is a molecule; it is comprised of hydrogen and oxygen atoms.
A molecule is 2 or more atoms bonded to form a "compound' with it's own unique chemical properties. Bonds increase stability. A molecule of water is comprised of 2 Hydrogen atoms and one Oxygen atom. A molecule of Oxygen is comprised of 2 Oxygen atoms. Sugars and carbohydrates are combination of Carbon, Oxygen, Hydrogen Proteins Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen A molecule can be as simple as 2Hydrogen atoms or as complicated as DNA
A molecule comprised of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms which, at standard temperature and pressure, is a colorless, odorless gas.
ONE oxygen molecule (O2) contains two atoms of oxygen (O).
Gases such as helium, neon have one atom in their stable molecules, compounds such as oxygen, nitrogen, bromine have two, ozone has three, phosphorus has four and sulfur has basically eight (and it forms various crown like structures with differed numbers of atoms).
There are two atoms of Hydrogen in the molecule.
A molecule with two atoms is called diatomic.
diatomic molecule
Molecules are not atoms, so I assume they can be classified as non-examples of atoms. Water is a molecule, and therefore not an atom. Water is comprised of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Carbon is an atom.