Put it on your self and find out.
Chlorine is a substance; it does not have a gender.
Oh, dude, the texture of chlorine is like... not really a thing, you know? Chlorine is a gas at room temperature, so it doesn't really have a texture like a solid or liquid would. It's just kind of there, doing its chlorine thing. So, yeah, texture of chlorine? Not really a thing to worry about.
Chlorine and oxygen do not typically form an ionic compound. Chlorine tends to form covalent compounds, like chlorine gas (Cl2), while oxygen typically forms covalent compounds like oxygen gas (O2) or diatomic oxygen.
Chlorine like all gases , except the Noble Gases, is a polyatomic molecule. Two chlorine atoms make up a molecule of chlorine gas . It formula is 'Cl2'.
Chlorine is typically measured in mass units, such as grams, when quantifying the amount of chlorine in a sample or substance. This is because chlorine, like other elements, has a specific atomic mass that can be represented in grams.
Slightly itchy.
Sunlight, chlorine...
There is chlorine in pool water. If you accidentaly drink it (like I did once) you feel head pressure and your head starts to throb.
Fluorine is similar to chlorine.
The internet has plenty of pictures of chlorine and chlorine based products. Like for example ask.com or google.com or even yahoo.com The internet has plenty of pictures of chlorine and chlorine based products. Like for example ask.com or google.com or even yahoo.com
Chlorine forms just one bond.
Chlorine is a substance; it does not have a gender.
I have a salt water pool. My skin does not feel dried out after drying off like in a regular Chlorine pool. I cannot say scientifically it is better but my skin and hair feel better
No, sharks do not like or tolerate chlorine well. Chlorine is toxic to sharks and can harm them if they are exposed to it in high concentrations, such as in chlorinated water in swimming pools. Sharks are marine animals that are sensitive to changes in their environment and do not have the ability to regulate their exposure to chlorine.
Chlorine is the element that smells like bleach. When in contact with water, chlorine forms hypochlorous acid, which is a common component of bleach and is responsible for its distinctive smell.
It sounds like the chlorine generator is broken
A salt water pool does not actually smell like chlorine. The smell comes from chloramines, which are compounds produced when chlorine combines with contaminants in the water. Salt water pools use a chlorine generator to create chlorine from salt, but should have lower levels of chloramines compared to traditional chlorine pools.