If both bond lengths are the same, how can you choose two O atoms to be the central ones?
I can rationalize, saying you are imagining a certain stage in a reaction where one O atom approaches an O2 molecule.
The O atom in the center position of O3 has two single bonds.
Similarly, when water vapor condenses, heavier water molecules holding O atoms tend to condense and precipitate first.
The removal rate is slow, since the concentration of O atoms is very low.
O atoms, for example, lose their first electron when they absorb 1314 kJ/mol of energy.
In this very formal depiction, negative charge is localized on the O atoms of the single P-O bonds.
You know that under the surface is a lattice of Si atoms linked by O atoms.
It is even possible to have a surface that has O atoms only.
Rather, the electronegativity of the central atom (E) and the number of O atoms determine oxoacid acidity.