because we need oxygen to be able to breath and without carbon dioxide, oxygen couldn't exist.
No, oxygen, hydrogen, and carbon dioxide do not weigh the same. They have different atomic masses, with oxygen being heavier than hydrogen and carbon dioxide being heavier than both oxygen and hydrogen.
Carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, hydrogen.
How could it? There is no carbon in hydrogen. It order to make carbon dioxide, you must have carbon and oxygen.
The monomers for these molecules are as follows: Oxygen: O2 Hydrogen: H2 Nitrogen: N2 Carbon dioxide: CO2
there is no hydrogen in carbon dioxide. since carbon dioxide is CO2 there are 3 carbon and 6 oxygen atoms in three molecules.
Methane burns in oxygen and gets oxidised. Carbon is oxidised to carbon dioxide, hydrogen to water.
During combustion, hydrogen and carbon react with oxygen to form water and carbon dioxide. The hydrogen combines with oxygen to form water vapor (H2O), while carbon combines with oxygen to form carbon dioxide (CO2).
No. Water is a compound of oxygen and hydrogen. Carbon and oxygen will combined to form carbon dioxide or carbon monoxide.
Yes, carbon dioxide (CO2) contains carbon and oxygen, water (H2O) contains hydrogen and oxygen, and glucose (C6H12O6) contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. So, all three compounds have elements within them.
Plants get these elements from carbon dioxide and water.
5 molecules of carbon dioxide will contain 5 carbon atoms (1 per molecule) and no hydrogen atoms as carbon dioxide contains only carbon and oxygen. The 5 molecules will contain a total of 10 oxygen atoms (2 per molecule).
Sugar (C12H22O11) is composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. These carbon comes from carbon dioxide (CO2) in the air and hydrogen (H2) and oxygen O2) from water. The energy for the converssion comes from sunlight.Sugar (C12H22O11) is composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. These carbon comes from carbon dioxide (CO2) in the air and hydrogen (H2) and oxygen O2) from water. The energy for the converssion comes from sunlight.