Covalent bonds, (single, double, triple)
Yes !
yeap!
No. Sharing of electrons means that the bond is covalent. Ionic bonds involve the transfer of electrons.
True. Nitrogen can share three pairs of electrons and has a lone pair of electrons for a total of eight in it's valence shell
It is not possible to say for certain which pair of the isotopes below are of the same element as no options have been provided. There are many different pairs of isotopes that make up many different elements.
Two atoms sharing three pairs of electrons have a triple bond.
a carbon atom can share electrons with up to four other atoms.
The pairs of electrons are shared between atoms.
Electronegativity is the attraction of an atom for the shared pairs of electrons.
Four bond types:Covalent: pairs of electrons are shared roughly equally between two elements.Polar: pairs of electrons are shared between two elements, but pulled much closer to one element.Ionic: electrons pulled from one element by another element creating attraction by charge.Metallic: electrons "dance" across multiple elements in order to satisfy the requirements of all deficient elements.
they blow upinto 1 billion peices and kill everyone
Covalent bonding occurs when atoms share two or more electrons. Electrons are shared in pairs.