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No hydrogen will not burn in the absence of air unless another oxidizer is present.
Hydrogen and oxygen are already elements. You don't get elements as a product. You get water, which is a compound.
Water itself does not burn, as it is a compound made of hydrogen and oxygen. However, hydrogen, which is a component of water, can burn under specific conditions. Hydrogen can burn in the presence of oxygen and an ignition source, such as a spark or flame. This reaction produces water vapor and heat.
Hydrogen is a colorless gas that burns with oxygen. If substances will burn in air, those same substance will burn better in oxygen.
Hydrogen burns with a pale blue flame, while oxygen does not burn on its own. In a combustion reaction with hydrogen, oxygen will support the combustion process by reacting with the hydrogen to produce water vapor.
Hydrogen and oxygen bond through a covalent bond to form a water molecule. One hydrogen atom shares its electron with an oxygen atom to complete their outer electron shells, forming a stable molecule.
No hydrogen will not burn in the absence of air unless another oxidizer is present.
Hydrogen and oxygen are already elements. You don't get elements as a product. You get water, which is a compound.
Yes. When you burn hydrogen the product is water. If you pass an electric current through that water you can split it back into hydrogen and oxygen.
Hydrogen is a colorless gas that burns with oxygen. If substances will burn in air, those same substance will burn better in oxygen.
Water itself does not burn, as it is a compound made of hydrogen and oxygen. However, hydrogen, which is a component of water, can burn under specific conditions. Hydrogen can burn in the presence of oxygen and an ignition source, such as a spark or flame. This reaction produces water vapor and heat.
The chemical compound HC2H3O2 is formed of three elements: Hydrogen, Oxygen and Carbon. In total, in one molecule there are 4 Hydrogen atoms, 2 Carbon atoms and 2 Oxygen atoms. So, in one molecule, there are 8 atoms all together.
Hydrogen burns with a pale blue flame, while oxygen does not burn on its own. In a combustion reaction with hydrogen, oxygen will support the combustion process by reacting with the hydrogen to produce water vapor.
Technically hydrogen and helium do not need oxygen to burn, they burn by themselves, otherwise the object that needs burning must have oxygen as a supplimental fuel source.
Water. You can burn oxygen and you can burn hydrogen but you can't burn water.
Yes, hydrogen burns and produces energy when it reacts with oxygen, a process known as combustion.
Snow does not burn (combine rapidly with oxygen) because it is a very stable molecule. It will melt or sublimate, but not burn.