Hydrogen and oxygen can coexist in the atmosphere, but they do not form water spontaneously. This is because the reaction between hydrogen and oxygen to form water requires an input of energy to break the chemical bonds in the molecules. In nature, this reaction typically occurs in the presence of a spark or flame, initiating a combustion reaction.
The water used in photosynthesis is split into oxygen and hydrogen ions. The oxygen is released into the atmosphere, while the hydrogen ions are used to produce energy in the form of ATP and NADPH that the plant can use to make glucose.
Water is a compound made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom bonded together. If there were no hydrogen and oxygen in water, it would not exist as a substance. The properties and characteristics of water, such as its liquid state, transparency, and ability to dissolve other substances, depend on the presence of hydrogen and oxygen.
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.
Hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, and all the noble gases exist as a gas at standard temperature and pressure.
No, a 2-1 ratio of hydrogen atoms to oxygen atoms does not exist in fatty acids. Fatty acids consist mostly of carbon and hydrogen atoms, with only a few oxygen atoms present in functional groups like carboxyl (-COOH) groups.
very high temperature is needed to combine hydrogen and oxygen. at that temperature, water exists in gaseous form Oxygen exists as a gas in our atmosphere, because there isn't very much hydrogen in the atmosphere. If the Earth's atmosphere contained a substantial amount of hydrogen mixed with the oxygen, it would be an explosive mixture. Any spark would set it off. They the oxygen and hydrogen would combine to form water, and we would be left without enough oxygen to breathe.
The biggest gas among hydrogen, helium, and water vapor, besides oxygen, is water vapor. Water vapor is the gaseous form of water and can exist in significant amounts in the Earth's atmosphere. Hydrogen and helium are lighter gases and typically exist in smaller quantities in the atmosphere compared to water vapor.
It IS possible for hydrogen to be in the atmosphere since we find it there today. Hydrogen is lighter than any other gas, so it of all the gasses in the atmosphere is most readily able to be lost to space. It also combines readily with oxygen to form water, and forms other compounds. However, a small amount of H2 gas does exist in the earth's atmosphere.
Yes. Mostly Hydrogen & Helium.
The water used in photosynthesis is split into oxygen and hydrogen ions. The oxygen is released into the atmosphere, while the hydrogen ions are used to produce energy in the form of ATP and NADPH that the plant can use to make glucose.
In the Earth atmosphere hydrogen exist only as traces: 0,000055 %.
No, oxygen and nitrogen are gases that do not contain water. Water is made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Oxygen and nitrogen are elements that exist as gases in the Earth's atmosphere.
oxygen
One.
Water is a compound made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom bonded together. If there were no hydrogen and oxygen in water, it would not exist as a substance. The properties and characteristics of water, such as its liquid state, transparency, and ability to dissolve other substances, depend on the presence of hydrogen and oxygen.
Oxygen has a diatomic molecule and ozone a triatomic molecule.But also monoatomic oxygen exist.
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.