With difficulty but yes it does - particularly Fluorine and oxygen.
Xenon reacts directly with fluorine only.
Yes , Flourine
No, it will not.
xenon is stable compound.......
Elements have a number of electrons in their outer shell of the atom, all elements want to have a full shell and usually form with other atoms to do so. However, Xenon is a noble gas and already has a full outer shell and so does not combine with other elements unless it is made to do so.
I don't think any element can easily , or even bond with Xenon. Xenon is a noble gas with enough electrons on the outermost shell, therefore it exist alone like other noble gas such as helium, argon in the same group: Group 0.
Xenon reacts directly with fluorine only.
Xenon is a noble gas so it doesn't bond, but radium bonds pretty well Xenon is the only noble gas that bonds with a other element.
Yes , Flourine
No. Xenon is a noble gas, silver is not.
No, it will not.
No. Xenon is chemically inert. Hence it does not combine with other elements and is not found in food materials.
Xenon is an inert gas and it rarely and hardly reacts with other elements at standard conditions.
xenon is stable compound.......
You probably mean which elements tend to bond. The answer is: all of them except the ones in the last column (Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon and Radon).
Xenon is one of the elements. It is a type of gas (another example of a gas is the oxygen we all breathe). It is inert (whereas, for example, oxygen can combine with hydrogen to form water, xenon does not combine with other elements).
Noble gases do not often combine with other elements.