Can you rephrase the question, please? I think that will help us both.
Bromine (Br2) is a brown liquid poisonous diatomic molecule at room temperature.
The inward force among the molecules of a liquid is Surface Tension
It all depends on which molecule you have.
No.
it depends whenever it is a solid, liquid or gas
a molecule is a gas,solid, or liquid
Liquid bromine is a monoatomic molecule as it is a liquid
Then that molecule will escape the surface of the liquid and become a molecule of gas. This is the process by which water slowly evaporates even when not heated.
Bromine, Br2, is a diatomic molecule that is liquid.
The number of neutrons will depend on what is the liquid. There is no general rule.
Bromine (Br2) is a brown liquid poisonous diatomic molecule at room temperature.
The movement of a molecule's particles in a solid move much less and are more structured than a liquid, and a liquid's particles move less than a gas.The movement of a molecule's particles of solid move much less and are more rigid than liquid, and liquid more so than a gas.
The movement of a molecule's particles in a solid move much less and are more structured than a liquid, and a liquid's particles move less than a gas.The movement of a molecule's particles of solid move much less and are more rigid than liquid, and liquid more so than a gas.
The movement of a molecule's particles in a solid move much less and are more structured than a liquid, and a liquid's particles move less than a gas.The movement of a molecule's particles of solid move much less and are more rigid than liquid, and liquid more so than a gas.
The inward force among the molecules of a liquid is Surface Tension
because the water molacue is liquid at tempreture of the earth
It all depends on which molecule you have.