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I removed this picture due to several objections:
1- it's kind of crude.2- the animation flips by waaay too fast.3- The text moving around made me feel a little sick4- The "hydrogen atoms feel an attraction" is not a particularly useful description of what's going on, this hardly does justice to the notion of orbital overlap and wavefunction sums, and isn't particularly distinctive with respect to say, ionic bonding.5- If we were to reject grounds #4, the phenomena isn't particular to sigma bonds, except for the fact that we are seeing two "hydrogens" coming together, Pi and Delta bonds work the same way.
"According to the sigma bond rule, the number of sigma bonds in a molecule is equivalent to the number of atoms plus the number of rings minus one."
Wait, but from a graph theory perspective, isn't this basically saying the number of sigma bonds equals to the number of "edges"?Ahyangyi (talk)04:17, 7 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]
The word sigma is used in many sentences concerning chemical bonding, here you’ll find the true meaning of the word154.161.40.202 (talk)17:30, 2 January 2025 (UTC)[reply]