Under normal conditions of temperature and pressure, neon forms no elemental molecules. It can possibly form compounds with some other, extremely electronegative, elements. These compounds, if they exist, would have formulas.
Neon is an element, so it is composed of atoms. Neon is also a noble gas, which means it generally does not react to form molecules of any kind.
A neon gas has neon atoms.
As a noble gas, Neon does not normally form any molecules - it is a monatomic gas (unless you put it under enough pressure or get it down to reeeeallllllyyyyy low temperatures).As such the formula is just "Ne"
London forces are the only forces present in neon molecules.
neon and helium
Neon has atoms not molecules.
Well, water (H2O) does exist as molecules, which are the smallest representative particles of water. However, neon (Ne) is an element, which means its smallest representative particle is the atom.
The mass of 1 atom of neon is 20 amu. It doesn't form molecules
Any of the diatomic molecules like H2 gas, O2 gas, N2 gas, etc.
No, neon is an element on the periodic table located in group 18 of the periodic table, no element can be an organic on its own, although carbon is the basis of organic life. but your question is also flawed because a molecule is made up of a group atoms, not just one.
No. Neon exists only as individual atoms and never forms molecules.
Any neon, it is only a name here.