No, liquid oxygen does not exist naturally on Earth in large quantities. It is typically produced through the process of cryogenic distillation, where air is cooled and compressed to extract oxygen in its liquid form.
Yes, oxygen can exist in a liquid state at very low temperatures. Oxygen liquefies at around -183°C under normal atmospheric pressure. Liquid oxygen is used in various industrial and medical applications.
Yes, but under atmospheric pressure it must be cooled to 90 Kelvin, about -183 Celsius.
Hydrogen can't exist as a three-atom single-element molecule no matter what you do to it - it has only one bonding site. If you stick an atom with two bonding sites between the hydrogen atoms you can pull it off, but this isn't a question about water. Oxygen can naturally exist as a three-atom molecule - it's ozone.
No, oxygen can exist in all three states of matter depending on temperature and pressure: as a gas at room temperature, as a liquid at very low temperatures, and as a solid at extremely low temperatures.
Hydrogen, Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine and Chlorine
No, liquid oxygen does not occur naturally on Earth. Oxygen exists in a gaseous form in the atmosphere and must be cooled to very low temperatures (-183 degrees Celsius) to become a liquid.
Yes, oxygen can exist in a liquid state at very low temperatures. Oxygen liquefies at around -183°C under normal atmospheric pressure. Liquid oxygen is used in various industrial and medical applications.
Yes, but under atmospheric pressure it must be cooled to 90 Kelvin, about -183 Celsius.
Hydrogen can't exist as a three-atom single-element molecule no matter what you do to it - it has only one bonding site. If you stick an atom with two bonding sites between the hydrogen atoms you can pull it off, but this isn't a question about water. Oxygen can naturally exist as a three-atom molecule - it's ozone.
No, oxygen can exist in all three states of matter depending on temperature and pressure: as a gas at room temperature, as a liquid at very low temperatures, and as a solid at extremely low temperatures.
if there is no plants humans cant get oxygen so naturally people cant exist on earth
No - not naturally, it usually exist with other elements. To achieve a pure form, MnO2 needs to be heated with carbon to remove the oxygen.
The temperature has to right to allow liquid water to exist naturally. The temperature must not vary too much. The atmosphere needs the right amount of oxygen. There must be enough water for oceans to exist but not too much so that land areas are available for LAWKI (life as we know it).
Hydrogen, Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine and Chlorine
Not naturally,but yes they do exist.
Yes, oxygen is a naturally occurring element that is essential for life on Earth. It is a colorless, odorless gas that makes up about 21% of the Earth's atmosphere. Oxygen is also found in compounds such as water and carbon dioxide.
its a gas