It IS possible for hydrogen to be in the atmosphere since we find it there today.
Hydrogen is lighter than any other gas, so it of all the gasses in the atmosphere is most readily able to be lost to space. It also combines readily with oxygen to form water, and forms other compounds. However, a small amount of H2 gas does exist in the earth's atmosphere.
0.00005% of the atmosphere is hydrogen.
Hydrogen is found in the atmosphere.
* 22% of Mercury's atmosphere is hydrogen. * Venus does not have pure hydrogen in its atmosphere, but does have hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride. * Earth has almost no hydrogen. * Mars does not contain any significant amount of hydrogen in its atmosphere. * Jupiter's atmosphere is roughly 90% hydrogen! * Saturn's atmosphere has even more: about 97% is hydrogen! * Uranus' atmosphere is 83% hydrogen. * Neptune's atmosphere contains 74% hydrogen.
Hydrogen and HeliumThe major component of Uranus's atmosphere is Hydrogen.
No. Jupiter's atmosphere is mostly hydrogen, which is flammable, but since there is virtually no oxygen in Jupiter's atmosphere combustion is not possible.
Hydrogen is very scarce in the atmosphere: 0,oooo55 %.
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JupiterSaturnUranusNeptune
it is mainly hydrogen and helium.
Yes. Hydrogen is part - albeit a very small part - of the Earth's atmosphere. Typically it makes up about 0.000055% of the atmosphere
This statement is not accurate. The two major components of Earth's atmosphere are nitrogen (about 78%) and oxygen (about 21%), not hydrogen. Hydrogen is present in trace amounts in the atmosphere.
hydrogen makes up 0.000055% of our atmosphere