The ratio of hydrogen to WHAT!
Hydrogen peroxide (H202)
The ratio of atoms in monosaccharides is 1 carbon: 2 hydrogen: 1 oxygen.
One atom of carbon to wo atoms of hydrogen to onHH2o
2 atoms of hydrogen to 1 atom of oxygen.
If you are writing a ratio for the compound water (H2O) That means there are 2 Hydrogen (H) And one oxygen (O) That means the ratio is 2:1
3 : 1
The ratio 2:1 is only for Water, H2O, but there are compounds such as H2O2 (Hydrogen Peroxide) which has ratio 1:1.
The ratio of hydrogen to oxygen in carbohydrates is 2H:1O, which is the same ratio as in water molecules.
The hydrogen- oxygen ratio is 2:1, which is the same ratio in water.
The ratio of oxygen to hydrogen in a polysaccharide is independent of the type of monosaccharides that it consists of. The ratio does not depend on the number of carbons in the monosaccharide. Thus, for all polysaccharide compounds the ratio of hydrogen to oxygen is 2:1.
That ratio is about 53,000.
6
3:1
The ratio of oxygen to hydrogen in a polysaccharide is independent of the type of monosaccharides that it consists of. The ratio does not depend on the number of carbons in the monosaccharide. Thus, for all polysaccharide compounds the ratio of hydrogen to oxygen is 2:1.
2:1 is the ratio of hydrogen to oxygen atoms.
The atomic ratio is 2:1 The mass ratio is 1:8 because oxygen has an atomic mass 16 times greater than hydrogen
Because there's no reason that should be true. The definition of "lipid" has nothing to do with the oxygen/hydrogen ratio.