They'd look at it from all angles.
I believe it would be a T-shaped molecule because it has 3 bonding pairs and 2 lone pairs.
The molecular orbital diagram for CO shows the formation of sigma and pi bonding orbitals. The diagram would illustrate the mixing of carbon's 2s and 2p orbitals with oxygen's 2s and 2p orbitals to form molecular orbitals. The diagram would also show the bond order and relative energies of the bonding and antibonding orbitals in CO.
Cobalt!
Since oxygen is an inorganic substance, most likely an inorganic chemist would describe the chemical properties of oxygen.
Of course, this is a chemist.
ClO3F would be tetrahedral.
I believe it would be a T-shaped molecule because it has 3 bonding pairs and 2 lone pairs.
According the VSEPR theory of molecular geometry, the geometry of SCl2 would be the same as H2O which is a bent angle
I would suppose so as without temperature there is no movement of molecules. That is what temperature is; the movement of molecules. Absolute zero in temperature would mean the complete stoppage of all molecular movement.
A chemist would be most likely to study questions related to the composition, structure, properties, and transformations of matter at the molecular and atomic levels. For example, they may investigate how different substances react with each other, how to synthesize new materials, or how to optimize chemical processes for specific applications.
I'm sure companies such as NASA, or medical research companies would love to have a qualified chemist
I would be a chemist, what kind of scientist would you be?
No, he was not a chemist and I would guess he didn't know much about chemistry.
a chemist
The molecular orbital diagram for CO shows the formation of sigma and pi bonding orbitals. The diagram would illustrate the mixing of carbon's 2s and 2p orbitals with oxygen's 2s and 2p orbitals to form molecular orbitals. The diagram would also show the bond order and relative energies of the bonding and antibonding orbitals in CO.
no i would most defienetely not
A herd.