The correct response is: "No, there is not because carbon needs four bonds, so it bonds with each hydrogen atom; hydrogen only forms one bond."
In methane (CH₄), the carbon atom forms four single bonds with four hydrogen atoms, and there are no bonds between the hydrogen atoms themselves. This structure allows each atom to achieve a stable configuration: carbon achieves a complete outer shell through four bonds, and each hydrogen atom achieves a stable duet through its single bond with carbon. If hydrogen atoms were to bond with each other, they would form H₂ instead of forming bonds with carbon.