Water has a bent shape. It is a polar molecule, with two pairs of unbond electrons opposite the two hydrogens. The two hydrogens ( H-O-H ) have about a 120 degree angle.
A molecule of water has the molecular geometry bent, which results from having 2 bonded pairs of electrons and two unbonded pairs of electrons. As to the polarity, a molecule is either polar or non-polar, based on the difference in the electronegativity values of the atoms present and the overall geometry of the molecule. There is a suficietly large electronegativity difference between the hydrogen atoms and the oxygen atom to create a polar molecule, and a bent geometry will not cancel out this polarity. Thus, water is polar.
dihydrogen monoxide
H2O is a scientific version for Water, it is on the periodic table :) x
H2O is the chemical formula for water, which is a common compound found on Earth in liquid, solid, and gaseous forms.
The equation h2o(s) heat -> h2o (l) describes the process of solid water (ice) melting into liquid water.
Bent
H2O?
The molecular geometry of H2O is bent or angular. The oxygen atom is surrounded by two hydrogen atoms, resulting in a bent shape with a bond angle of approximately 104.5 degrees.
It has a bent structure just like the H2O and H2S.
According the VSEPR theory of molecular geometry, the geometry of SCl2 would be the same as H2O which is a bent angle
That is related to the relative positions of the orbitals involved.
NH3 and H2O have a tetrahedral arrangement of all the electrons about the central atom. MgCl2 and CO2 have different arrangements: MgCl2 adopts a linear geometry due to Mg's +2 charge and Cl's -1 charge, while CO2 has a linear molecular geometry due to its linear molecule shape.
Electron geometry for this is tetrahedral. There are two O-F single bonds, which makes 2 electron groups. There are two lone pairs around oxygen, which make up the last two electron groups. Molecules with four electron groups has a tetrahedral Electron geometry.
Euclidean geometry has become closely connected with computational geometry, computer graphics, convex geometry, and some area of combinatorics. Topology and geometry The field of topology, which saw massive developement in the 20th century is a technical sense of transformation geometry. Geometry is used on many other fields of science, like Algebraic geometry. Types, methodologies, and terminologies of geometry: Absolute geometry Affine geometry Algebraic geometry Analytic geometry Archimedes' use of infinitesimals Birational geometry Complex geometry Combinatorial geometry Computational geometry Conformal geometry Constructive solid geometry Contact geometry Convex geometry Descriptive geometry Differential geometry Digital geometry Discrete geometry Distance geometry Elliptic geometry Enumerative geometry Epipolar geometry Euclidean geometry Finite geometry Geometry of numbers Hyperbolic geometry Information geometry Integral geometry Inversive geometry Inversive ring geometry Klein geometry Lie sphere geometry Non-Euclidean geometry Numerical geometry Ordered geometry Parabolic geometry Plane geometry Projective geometry Quantum geometry Riemannian geometry Ruppeiner geometry Spherical geometry Symplectic geometry Synthetic geometry Systolic geometry Taxicab geometry Toric geometry Transformation geometry Tropical geometry
* geometry in nature * for practcal use of geometry * geometry as a theory * historic practical use of geometry
Euclidean geometry, non euclidean geometry. Plane geometry. Three dimensional geometry to name but a few
There are different kinds of geometry including elementary geometry, Euclidean geometry, and Elliptic Geometry.