Oxygen ready attracts other positively charged atoms due to its high electronegativity
magnesium :)
Yes, copper readily combines with several other elements. Combined with zinc it is brass, combined with tin it is bronze. It combines with many other elements including oxygen and sulfur.
Oxygen, in its pure form, does not have a distinct odor. However, when it is combined with other elements or compounds, it can sometimes produce odors.
There's not much oxygen on any planet except Earth. I mean "free" oxygen, not chemically combined with other elements. Obviously carbon dioxide contains oxygen combined with carbon, for example.
Almost all the time, unless it is combined with other elements such as sodium.
When oxygen is combined with rocks and minerals, it forms oxides. Oxides are compounds that contain oxygen bonded to other elements, such as silicon dioxide (SiO2) in quartz or iron oxide in hematite (Fe2O3).
Oxygen combined with one other element is an oxide.
Yes, rubidium has many chemical compounds.
No, bromelite is not an oxide. It is a mineral that is composed primarily of the elements beryllium, aluminum, and silicon. Oxides are compounds that contain oxygen combined with one or more other elements.
The noble gases.
You will get water and argon. Hydrogen an oxygen will readily and violently combine to form water. Argon is an inert gas, and so will not combine with other elements.
Yes, O2 is the molecular formula for dioxygen, which is a diatomic molecule composed of two oxygen atoms. It is not an oxide, which typically refers to compounds where oxygen is combined with other elements.