water
A polar molecule
A polar molecule in which there is some separation of charge in the chemical bonds, so that one part of the molecule has a slight positive charge and the other a slight negative charge. A common example of polar molecule is water. The water acts as a solvent for polar molecules. A non-polar molecule has no separation of charge, so no positive or negative poles are formed.
When a molecule is nonpolar it means there are no charges.
Yes
Water has a polar molecule, while oil has a non-polar molecule. Because of this, oil and water are immiscible.
Sucrose, or common household sugar, is a polar molecule.
Generally no. With some exceptions photosynthesizing organisms do not survive in the severe climates within the polar circles.
Water (H2O)
A polar molecule
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
A polar molecule.
It is a polar molecule and has polar bonds.
This is a water molecule H2O
water molecule H2O
a non polar molecule
water is a polar, covalent molecule. it doesn't have an unsharing molecule. its also has to do with the 8 properties of water.