It doesn't. Helium is chemically inert or doesn't have any chemical property.
Helium's chemical property is its low reactivity.
No that is a physical property.
It is a chemical property.
One chemical property of helium is its inertness, meaning it does not easily react with other elements to form compounds. Helium is also non-toxic and has a low boiling point, making it useful for applications like cooling superconducting magnets.
Helium has completely filled orbitals / energy levels and is chemically inert. So it has no chemically property.
Helium is an element a pure substance it is a chemical. It has properties eg it is a gas, it is colourless, it is odourless
No. This is because it is demonstrating the fact that it is less dense than the air. Density is a physical property. Therefore the helium balloon rising to the ceiling is not a chemical property, and instead a physical property.
The only significant chemical property of helium is that it does not undergo chemical reactions.
Helium is an element that has physical properties. So far it has eluded efforts to make it react with anything else. It could thus be argued it does not have chemical properties other than it is very inert.
Helium doesnt have a melting point as it will never form solid.
He (helium) and Ne (neon) are not properties. They are chemical elements. If you mean to as are the metals then no. They are nonmetals.
No, helium is a noble gas on the periodic table of elements and is combustible which is a property of a gas.Additional answer to correct the aboveHelium is indeed a noble gas, which means it won't react with anything. Furthermore, it's not correct to say combustibility is a property of a gas, because there are plenty of gases which are not combustible, for example carbon dioxide, argon, neon, etc.