Hydrogen and oxygen are two completely different elements. When combined in a chemical reaction, two hydrogen atoms (H2) combine one oxygen atom to form a molecule of water (H2O)
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.
an oxygen and a hydrogen atom do not weight the same
No, Hydrogen is an element and hydroxide is a compound made by oxygen and hydrogen (OH-)
Hydrogen and oxygen. What is probably meant is which two elements make dihydrogen oxide (water; H2O). The answer remains the same: hydrogen and oxygen.
Water (H2O) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) are two compounds that have the same elements (hydrogen and oxygen) but in different ratios. Water has a 2:1 ratio of hydrogen to oxygen atoms, while hydrogen peroxide has a 2:2 ratio.
No. Hydrogen and oxygen are elements, not compounds. They are not the same.
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.
an oxygen and a hydrogen atom do not weight the same
No, Hydrogen is an element and hydroxide is a compound made by oxygen and hydrogen (OH-)
Hydrogen and oxygen. What is probably meant is which two elements make dihydrogen oxide (water; H2O). The answer remains the same: hydrogen and oxygen.
The hydrogen- oxygen ratio is 2:1, which is the same ratio in water.
No, oxygen and hydrogen are not the same compound. They are two different elements on the periodic table. When they combine chemically, they form a new compound called water, which is made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom (H2O).
No because Oxygen is an element and it only contains atoms of Oxygen and nothing else, no Hydrogen at all. A compound of Hydrogen must contain Hydrogen plus something else. Water contains Hydrogen and Oxygen (H2O) so that would be a compound of Hydrogen and oxygen.
A gram of hydrogen has a greater volume than a gram of oxygen at the same temperature and pressure, as hydrogen has a lower molecular weight and therefore occupies more space per gram compared to oxygen.
hydrogen, oxygen
No. They are two different elements.
Yes