No. The noble gases are in group 18 in wide form periodic tables and group VIII in some older narrow form tables.
Noble gases are also known as, 1- inert gases 2- rare gases 3- monoatomic gases 4- zero group elements.
1) they are all gases 2) they are all monoatomic
No; the noble gas family doesn't contain any metals in it, it only has gases. Also it contains all of the least reactive elements. The most reactive metals are in the alkali metal family, group 1, lithoium , sodium, poatssium etc..
Noble gases are all gases and not solids. In addition they are generally chemically inert as they have completely filled orbitals. Also the most active solids are generally found in group 1
The shorthand using noble gases for gold is [Xe] 4f^14 5d^10 6s^1.
Another name for noble gases is inert gases.
i think they are not lager because all atoms react to be stable (full) so group 1 elements react to be like noble gases thus making them small n again their mass number is less than those of noble gases.
No. The first three noble gases (helium, neon and argon) have 1, 2 and 3 energy levels respectively.
hydrogen is in group 1, the rest in noble gases (group 18)
No, transition metals and noble gases are two different groups of elements on the periodic table. Transition metals are found in the d-block of the periodic table and include elements like iron, copper, and zinc. Noble gases are found in the far right column of the periodic table and include elements like helium, neon, and argon.
Noble gasses do not exist in large amounts in the earth's atmosphere. The noble gases in total sum up to less than 1% of the gasses in the earth's atmosphere.
No, not all noble gases have at least 3 electron shielding layers. The noble gas helium (He) has only two electron shielding layers, while the remaining noble gases (Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, and Radon) have three or more electron shielding layers.