Yes. Both are gases at room temperature.
Carbon is a solid; oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen are gases at room temperature.
The usual state of oxygen and hydrogen: they are gases at room temperature.
Oxygen
Hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, neon, chlorine, argon, krypton, xenon, radon are the 11 gases (not 12).
Most nonmetals are gases at room temperature, such as oxygen, nitrogen, and fluorine. Some nonmetals, like sulfur and carbon, are solids at room temperature.
Carbon is a solid; oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen are gases at room temperature.
The usual state of oxygen and hydrogen: they are gases at room temperature.
The usual state of oxygen and hydrogen: they are gases at room temperature.
Oxygen
oxygen and hydrogen are a type of matter called gas
Hydrogen gas and oxygen gas are gases at room temperature. Oxygen supports combustion and hydrogen is very combustible. Water is a liquid at room temperature and is not combustible and does not support combustion.
All of the noble gases (group 18) are gases at room temperature. In addition, fluorine, chlorine, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen are gases at room temperature.
Water is a compound made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom bonded together, while hydrogen and oxygen are elements. Water has different physical properties than hydrogen and oxygen, such as being a liquid at room temperature, whereas hydrogen is a gas and oxygen is a gas. Additionally, water has different chemical and bonding properties compared to hydrogen and oxygen individually.
All of the noble gases, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, and chlorine.
They are gases at room temperature.
Hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, and all the noble gases exist as a gas at standard temperature and pressure.
Yes, both hydrogen and oxygen are gases at room temperature and pressure, so they can diffuse easily in air. Diffusion is the process by which gases mix due to the random motion of their particles.