Hydrogen was produced during the Big Bang, which created the universe.
The term for swirling clouds of hydrogen gas out of which stars are born is "nebula."
No. A star is born when hydrogen stars fusing.
Stars are often formed out of Hydrogen, they get the Hydrogen from clouds of either Hydrogen gas (H₂) or ionized Hydrogen, which is Hydrogen that is missing an electron. Both of those substances are found in space clouds and nebulae; nebulae (singular nebula), are the birthplace of many of the different things in the Universe, and contain traces of almost all of the stable elements. Stars will form from hydrogen and anything else that gets sucked into them in formation, and eventually form a rough sphere, and turn Hydrogen into Helium, and heavier atoms, until the star dies. TLDR; Stars are born from mostly Hydrogen, but have other space junk
False. A star is born when hydrogen starts to fuse into helium.
Henry Cavendish was the scientist that demonstrated that water is made up of both oxygen and hydrogen. Cavendish was born in the Kingdom of Sardinia in 1731.
Hydrogen Hydrogen Hydrogen Hydrogen
Hydrogen, helium, hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen selenide, hydrogen telluride, hydrogen fluoride, hydrogen chloride, hydrogen bromide, hydrogen iodide.
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Hydrogen gas is formed by air-born H2 molecules. Each H2 molecule consists of 2 hydrogen atoms, covalently bonded by overlapping 1s electron orbitals. So no, hydrogen gas is not an ionic bond, it is a covalent bond.
Hydrogen is an element. So the only element in hydrogen is hydrogen.
You seem to be referring to isotopes of hydrogen.
Hydrogen is composed of hydrogen atoms.