Hydrogen is the lightest element, generally made of one proton and one electron; a small percentage of hydrogen atoms also have one neutron, and have the special name "deuterium". (Hydrogen atoms with two neutrons are very rare, and don't exist in nature; this is called "tritium". Tritium is slightly radioactive.)
Other elements have more protons, and ALWAYS have some neutrons, and there are almost always as many neutrons as protons, or more.
All hydrogen atoms are the same but they are different from the atoms of other elements.
Yes, when oxygen atoms are bonded with hydrogen atoms, they can form compounds such as water (H2O). Oxygen and hydrogen atoms can also form other compounds like hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) through different types of bonds.
the Hydrogen molecule has a single covalent bonds between its constituent atoms.
Yes. Atoms are unique to whichever element they compose. They have different amounts of electrons, protons and (neutrons). For Example: Hydrogen Atom: 1 electron, 1 proton. Oxygen Atom: 8 electrons, 8 protons, 8 neutrons.
Hydrogen and oxygen are considered elements because they are made up of only one type of atom. In the case of hydrogen, it consists of hydrogen atoms, and in the case of oxygen, it consists of oxygen atoms. Elements are the basic building blocks of matter and cannot be broken down into simpler substances by chemical means.
All hydrogen atoms are the same but they are different from the atoms of other elements.
It is unclear what "different" means. If the question is asking if a compound of elements expresses different properties than the elements do by themselves, then yes. For example, hydrogen is a gas and oxygen is a gas. However, water, made of both hydrogen and oxygen is liquid. If the question is asking can a compound be separated from its elemental formula, the answer is no. Water will always have 1 oxygen atom for every 2 hydrogen atoms. Any other recipe (such as 2 oxygen atoms for every 2 hydrogen atoms) results in a different chemical (in this case hydrogen peroxide).
The formula for hydrogen gas is H2, indicating that it is composed of two hydrogen atoms bonded together. The formula for helium gas is simply He, as helium exists as single atoms and does not form bonds with itself or other elements in its elemental state.
It's true that ALL elements are made up of only one element. Hydrogen contains ONLY hydrogen atoms. Not oxygen atoms, or silver atoms, or xenon atoms, or any other atoms. All known types of elements are listed in a periodic table. Compare elements to molecules. Elements are substances made up soley of one type of atom, which combine with other elements to form molecules. For example, water is written as H2O, 2 atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oygen - one molecule of water requires 2 different elements. Think of it this way, you can't breeak water down smaller than one molecule of water and have it still be water. Likewise, you can't break one atom of the element hydrogen down and have it still be hydrogen.
Atoms of all elements can have neutrons in them. Only the element hydrogen has an isotope whose atoms do not contain neutrons, but all other isotopes of hydrogen have neutrons in them. In the heavier elements the number of neutrons always exceeds the number of protons in the atom.
Yes, when oxygen atoms are bonded with hydrogen atoms, they can form compounds such as water (H2O). Oxygen and hydrogen atoms can also form other compounds like hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) through different types of bonds.
the Hydrogen molecule has a single covalent bonds between its constituent atoms.
true
The chemical compound C3H3 has two element in it: Carbon and Hydrogen. In one molecule of this compound there are 6 atoms: 3 Carbon atoms and 3 Hydrogen atoms. Both elements in this compound, Carbon and Hydrogen are classed as other nonmetals. However this compound does not exist 'in real chemical life', it's a fantasy formula.
Atoms of elements have a fixed number of electrons that can bond with other atoms. Carbon has 4 electrons that can bond with other atoms. So 4 hydrogen atoms can bond with one carbon atom.
Yes, neutral hydrogen atoms can react readily with other atoms to form chemical compounds. Hydrogen is highly reactive because it has only one electron in its outer shell, making it eager to either gain or lose an electron to achieve a stable configuration. This reactivity allows hydrogen to easily form bonds with other elements.
they combine with themselves atoms of different elements connot combine with each other wothout making a new molecule