Nonpolar covalent bond.
Hydrogen
A hydrogen molecule has 2 atoms covalently bonded together. Hydrogen has 1 proton and 1 electron. It needs 2 electrons to be stable; to have the 1s orbital full; so 2 atoms of Hydrogen bond together sharing 2 electrons andboth atoms are stable.
Hydrogen itself is an atom. If that hydrogen atom were to lose/gain/share electrons it would become an isotope/ ion
hydrogen atoms share electrons when it forms covalent bonds
There are two different types of bonds when atoms join together. Covalent bonds are formed when atoms "share" electrons. Ionic bonds are formed when an atom gives up its electrons to another to form a bond.
The two atoms share their electrons - so it is a covalent bond ie a shared pair.
A molecule of hydrogen is two atoms of hydrogen bonded together so that they share their single electrons, making them act as if they had a full s1 orbital in both atoms.
A covalent bond because carbon and hydrogen are sharing electrons
Yes sometimes, that is how covalent bonds are formed.
Covalent bond is formed between the two atoms (hydrogen and iodine) in HI.
Metal atoms in their atomic state form metallic bonds which has a 'sea' of electrons.
Elemental hydrogen (H2) has two atoms sharing and electron cloud, as a binary molecule. In this arrangement the bonding is said to be covalent.