1. oxygen and the scientific way of saying it is 2. 1 sillicon and 2 oxygen
Bonds are needed in order for atoms to combine
The order of an element in a multiplicative group is the power to which it must be raised to get the identity element.
To combine clips in CapCut, import the clips you want to combine into the app, arrange them in the desired order on the timeline, and then export the final video with the combined clips.
Atoms combine in order to become stable, which for most atoms means having 8 valence electrons.
the functions are all even
In order to form compounds eg:sodium[Na] and hydroxide[OH] combine to form sodium hydroxide[NaOH]
Wikipedia is an online encyclopedia that has topics on practically everything. It is worth taking a look at this page, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quartz_clock It outlines a lot of detail about Quartz watches.
In order to create a fire you must have:oxygen (an element)fuel (a compound, sometimes and element)ignition source (energy)The fuel is basically carbon.
The order of a group is the same as its cardinality - i.e. the number of elements the set contains. The order of a particular element is the order of the (cyclic) group generated by that element - i.e. the order of the group {...a-4, a-3, a-2, a-1, e, a, a2, a3, a4...}. If these powers do not go on forever, it will have a finite order; otherwise the order will be infinite.
Metals and non-metals combine. They form ionic bonds.
They are different molecules--They are, however, related by the law of multiple proportions. This law states that when different compounds are formed by a combination of the same elements, different masses of one element combine with the same relative mass of the other element in a ratio of small whole numbers. They are different molecules--They are, however, related by the law of multiple proportions. This law states that when different compounds are formed by a combination of the same elements, different masses of one element combine with the same relative mass of the other element in a ratio of small whole numbers.
Circulatory. no