One oxygen atom shares electrons with two hydrogen atoms to create a water molecule.
Water is a molecule composed of covalently bonded hydrogen and oxygen atoms. It is not an ionic compound because the hydrogen and oxygen atoms within water share electrons rather than transferring them.
In one Molecule of water there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom
The atoms in a water molecule are held together by covalent bonds; this means that the bonded atoms have formed a hydrogen bond between them, leading to a water dimer.
Water is H2O that 2 Hydrogen atoms and one Oxygen atom per molecule.
A covalent bond is formed between the hydrogen and oxygen atoms within one water molecule. In this bond, the atoms share electrons to achieve a stable configuration.
Oxygen and hydrogen share a covalent bond when they form a molecule of water (H2O). In this bond, the atoms share electrons to fill their outer electron orbitals, forming a stable molecule.
A molecule of of water contain 3 atoms.
Oxygen molecule (O2) - two oxygen atoms share electrons to form a covalent bond. Methane molecule (CH4) - carbon and hydrogen atoms share electrons to form covalent bonds.
Hydrogen and oxygen atoms in a water molecule are held together by a covalent bond. This bond involves the sharing of electrons between the atoms to create a stable molecule.
In a water molecule the hydrogen atoms are held to the oxygen atom by covalent chemical bonds.
Atoms which form covalent bonds do share electrons. An example would be the atoms in a water molecule. Yes, the electrons are really shared.
Covalent bonds. (Atom bindings that share electron pairs)