Yes, Rn is a noble gas, which is also a nonmetal.
Radon is a noble gas and a nonmetal.
radon is a nonmetal.beacuse radon is nobel gas or inert gas.which makes it nonmetal.
Yes, Rn is radon a radioactive nonmetal. But the symbol Rn does not stand for "radioactive nonmetal." Rn Radon has no stable isotopes, so yes it is always a radioactive nonmetal.
Radon (Rn)
Radon is an inert or noble gas, and that's as far from being a metal as an element can get. You'll find radon at the bottom of the Group 18 elements (naturally) on the periodic table. Use the link below for more information.
No. The noble gases are Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, and Radon.
Any of the Halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine, and Astatine) or Noble Gases (Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon) would be considered a nonmetal.
nonmetal
There are no elements in Radon, Radon is an element in its own right.
Any element that is not a metal is, by definition, a nonmetal. These come in basically two types, the chemically active nonmetal and the inert nonmetal. Sulfur, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, silicon, phosphorus, and the halogens, fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine, are the most important of the chemically active nonmetals; hydrogen is an ambiguous element since it can be either a metal or a nonmetal, although it is usually a nonmetal (note that at low temperature and high pressure, hydrogen actually will become a metallic solid, with all the usual features of a metal, even though under more usual temperatures and pressures it is a transparent gas bearing no resemblance to a metal). The inert nonmetals are the noble gases, helium, neon, krypton, xenon, and radon.
No it would be a group 18 element (helium, neon, argon, xenom, krypton or radon). These are unreactive, gaseous non-metals, which don't conduct heat or electricity at all well.
Radon is a gas, possible to be in buildings. Radon 222 is an isotope of radon, the most common.