yes it does actually it forms compounds by collecting all the atoms and electrons together makes one, adds up to form a compound.
Yes. Neon is a noble gas so its outer energy level is full. It rarely ever forms compounds.
Not under typical Earth conditions, that's why it's called an "inert" gas. Or a noble gas.
None.
Neon does not form any compounds.
No reaction will occur, the elements will stay as they are.
At the room temperature they remain elements in a mixure; by heating a compound is obtained, carbon disulfide.
Because the elements in the air arent bonded chemically, they are just literally mix together.
when two elements combine, its called a compound. when when two things like water and koolaid mix combine, its a mixture!
Yes, you can mix 2 pure elements together without getting a compound. Eg: liquid hydrogen and oxygen. To get a compoud you have to heat them togehter using a spark. The product after the reaction is water.
No reaction will occur, the elements will stay as they are.
Gold is an element. It can be mixed with other elements to form compounds, but gold itself is a pure substance, not a mixture or a compound of elements.
The first element is H20 and the second is 02 when these 2 compounds mix they form water
Part of the definition of a compound is that it must contain atoms of at least two distinct elements.
When two or more elements are chemically combined,they form a compund.Like when you mix hydrogen and oxygen together, the result is H2O(water).When you combine sodium and chlorine,you get NaCl (salt).
a mix of 1 or 2 elements duu idiot
None. Neon is a noble gas: stable and nonreactive.Answer:While neon is a very inert element, there are reports that it forms a compound with fluorine. There is also evidence from optical and mass spectrometric studies that Ne+, (NeAr)+, (NeH)+, and (HeNe)+ exist. An unstable hydrate can be formed.
elements
elements
Err, Neon, in an isotope mix.
because the atoms of lithium are the type where they take any form easily and stick to other elements. Chlorine on the other hand is the element form of a noble gas, it doesn't mix. So when the lithium clings to the chlorine, with the chlorine being unwilling, then an ionic compound forms.
Neon certainly is an element. Every atom in neon has the same number of protons in its nucleus, namely 10, and every other atom in the universe has either more or fewer protons in its nucleus, which is what it means to be an element. That is what it means to be an element; you have the same particular number of protons in every single atom . Like Helium, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, and Radon, Neon is what we call a noble gas which means that it need not be able to form compounds at all, and unlike Krypton, Xenon, and Radon, but like Helium and Argon, it does indeed not form any compounds at all. It can of course form mixtures, such as if you mix it with other gases, including the other noble gases, but neon by itself is of course not mixed, or it would not be neon. Therefore, yes, neon is an element, not a mixture, and not a compound. If this was a homework question, I hope you will be able to answer it for yourself in future. What is more important, I really, really hope you will know what you are talking about when you do!