Yes. Think of air it is made up pincipally of molecular nitrogen (N2) and oxygen (O2)
Boxing as well as wrestling took place in a palaestra. " The palaestra functioned both independently and as a part of public gymnasia; a palaestra could exist without a gymnasium, but no gymnasium could exist without a palaestra."
Yes, it is possible to have steam, liquid water, and ice exist in the same space, but not a molecule of water can only be in one of the three phases.
It had no single inventor, it was independently invented in many countries by different groups of people.
Polaric molecule
korea
Noble gases, such as helium and neon, exist as single atoms due to their stable electron configurations. Oxygen and nitrogen also exist independently as diatomic molecules (O2 and N2) in the Earth's atmosphere.
Yes, single-celled organisms can exist independently.
no exist,all bacterias can move independently
No, for all elements the smallest particle that can exist independently is an atom.
Yes: Atoms of krypton almost always do exist independently of chemical bonding to any other atoms.
bcz their energy is low thats why they can exist independently while the energy of some atoms is so high that they can only exist as ions or molecuoles not as free atoms
Not necessarily. A molecule is the smallest unit of a chemical compound that can exist independently, while a compound is a substance made up of two or more different elements chemically bonded together. All compounds are molecules, but not all molecules are compounds.
Helium atoms are not considered molecules because they exist as individual atoms and do not form covalent bonds with other atoms to create a stable unit like a molecule. In the case of helium, each atom exists independently and does not combine with other atoms to form a molecule.
Hydrogen molecules do exist but they are less stable than hydrogen atoms. This is because hydrogen molecules require a large amount of energy to form since hydrogen atoms are highly reactive and tend to exist independently. Additionally, hydrogen molecules can easily dissociate into individual atoms at lower temperatures.
Yes they do.
yes it just will find a group eventually
No.