It's the chemical symbol for Oxygen. Is that what you meant?
because chemistry is also can try!w/o chemistry is nothing is to live the earth!!really really chemistry is also need to our body.
CaI stands for calcium iodide in chemistry. It is a chemical compound composed of calcium and iodine atoms.
R O R stands for an ether functional group in chemistry. It consists of an oxygen atom bonded to two alkyl or aryl groups. Ethers are commonly used as solvents in various chemical reactions.
R-O-R in chemistry represents an ether functional group, where R can be any organic substituent. Ethers are characterized by an oxygen atom connected to two alkyl or aryl groups. They are commonly used as solvents and have low reactivity compared to other functional groups.
The atomic symbol for oxygen is O. The chemistry symbol for water is H2O. Water covers about 70 percent of our planet & is needed to support life. Without it, we would not exist.
Oxygen
The letter "O" stands for oxygen in chemistry.
James O. Glanville has written: 'General chemistry for engineers' -- subject(s): Chemistry
Henry O. Daley has written: 'Problems in chemistry' -- subject- s -: Chemistry, Problems, exercises
Howard O. Triebold has written: 'Quantitative analysis' -- subject(s): Agricultural chemistry, Analysis, Analytic Chemistry, Chemistry, Analytic, Food, Quantitative
William O. Foye has written: 'Foye's principles of medicinal chemistry' -- subject(s): Pharmaceutical Chemistry 'Principles of medicinal chemistry' -- subject(s): Drug interactions, Drugs, Metabolism, Pharmaceutical chemistry
It is the element symbol O which represents oxygen.
because chemistry is also can try!w/o chemistry is nothing is to live the earth!!really really chemistry is also need to our body.
They are currently only dating, but chemistry is looking for the right moment to propose! :O
F. O. Harriss has written: 'Chemistry 11-13'
yes the symbol O is oxygen
Earle O. Bryant has written: 'Microbiological decomposition of wood, pulp, paper, and cellulose' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Decomposition (Chemistry), Paper industry, Chemistry