Water molecules are joined by hydrogen bonds; water is a polar covalent molecule.
Water is made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom bonded together, forming a molecule with the chemical formula H2O.
The nucleotides are joined together by phosphodiester linkages between the sugar of one nucleotide and the phosphate of the next.
When glucose or other monosaccharides are placed in an aqueous solution, they curl and take a ring form. This is in contrast to the linear form they take otherwise.
A molecule of water is formed with a polar covalent bond.
I just did this paper in Biology, the answer is Hydrogen bonds! :)
'H2' is a Hydrogen molecule (2 atoms of hydrogen joined together) - Hydrogen in its natural state (the gas) exists as the hydrogen molecule. A single atom of Hydrogen is just 'H'
A solution.
Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
its an Aqueous solution as there is no real chemical change taking place to either, so it is technically a mixture. A compound is when 2 or more elements are chemically joined, and a mixture can just be a jumble of elements or compounds that don't react with one and other.
It's H2O which means two hydrogen molecules to one oxygenThe elements of Hydrogen and oxygen are chemically joined together to form water. Two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen are joined together chemically to form one molecule of water.
hydration reaction
Water is made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom bonded together, forming a molecule with the chemical formula H2O.
Yes, NH3 In the gas it is molecular. In solution it dissolves to form NH4+ OH-
The nucleotides are joined together by phosphodiester linkages between the sugar of one nucleotide and the phosphate of the next.
When glucose or other monosaccharides are placed in an aqueous solution, they curl and take a ring form. This is in contrast to the linear form they take otherwise.
Sulphate is an ion. If joined with Hydrogen, it becomes Sulfuric Acid.
H2 Is a diatomic hydrogen molecule. It is made up of two hydrogen molecules that are joined together.