No, it does not. It is also oderless and tasteless
Hydrogen chloride gas is colorless.
Chlorine gas is green in color.
It's the same color as hydrogen -- colorless.
Hydrogen has no color at all, it is a colorless element. In making projects you can use white color or if you like buy a sphere glass to make more realistic...^^ by:Raphy_53846@yahoo.com
Pure hydrogen gas is actually colorless and odorless in its natural state. The blue color you might associate with hydrogen gas is usually due to a flame or spark produced when hydrogen gas combusts with oxygen.
its a colourless gas, and as such is transparent. I.e., no colour
The formula for the gas evolved during the reaction depends on the reactants involved. Common examples include hydrogen gas (H2), oxygen gas (O2), carbon dioxide (CO2), or chlorine gas (Cl2), among others. The color of the gas can vary depending on the specific gas being produced - for example, hydrogen is colorless and odorless, while chlorine gas is yellow-green in color.
pale blue or almost invisible. you can see hydrogen combusting from the reactors' explosion in Japan
methane Methane, which gives it it's blue color, hydrogen, and helium. ~Alex
The flame of a mixture of nitrogen and hydrogen would appear pale blue. This is because the hydrogen gas burns with a pale blue flame and the nitrogen present does not contribute any color to the flame.
methane Methane, which gives it it's blue color, hydrogen, and helium. ~Alex
Color coding is not the most usual way of presenting the periodic table of elements, which when it was devised by Mendeleev, was strictly black and white. If you are looking for hydrogen on the table, hydrogen is the first element.