No, the other way 'round. An element exists at the single-atom level. A molecule is made of more than one atom. It can be a single element(hydrogen is more stable if 2 form a molecule H2), or can be hugely complex and made up of many different elements.
This is a compound, a molecule.
A molecule of an element is a molecule made up of the same substance that can exist as an atom; for example, oxygen as O2.
Molecule I believe
Strontium is a chemical element, not a molecule.
the answer is atom because even if it is the last one an atom is the smallest
Hydrogen is an element because it is made up of only one type of atom, which is hydrogen itself. When two hydrogen atoms bond together, they form a hydrogen molecule (H2). So, hydrogen can exist as both an element and a molecule.
it tells you how much of the molecule the element is
This is a compound, a molecule.
The atom of an element is smaller than a molecule.
it tells you how much of the molecule the element is
it tells you how much of the molecule the element is
Percentage composition= (mass of the element/mass of the molecule)*100 The fraction of the molecule's mass that comes from the element's mass
"element" (2 make up a molecule)
Percentage composition= (mass of the element/mass of the molecule)*100 The fraction of the molecule's mass that comes from the element's mass
Nitrogen is an element that is usually found alone as the N2 molecule. It is not a compound.
Gold is an element.
Percentage composition= (mass of the element/mass of the molecule)*100 The fraction of the molecule's mass that comes from the element's mass