No, Xenon is a gas at 0 oC. It condenses to a liquid at -108 oC
Xenon difluoride or XeF2 is a potent fluorinating agent. It is one of the most stable compounds of xenon and is also used as an isotropic gaseous etchant for silicon.
calcium is not stable because the outer most atomic level is not full the only elements that are stable are the nobel gasses(helium,neon,argon,krypton,xenon,and radon)
Hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, neon, phosphorus, sulphur, chlorine, argon, bromine, krypton, iodine, xenon, mercury, astatine and radon are all gases as 500 deg C.
Xenon Difluoride
Xenon Trioxide
The boiling point of xenon is -108 oC (minus 108) so at 20oC it will be a gas.
Xenon is a gas.
-111.7 degrees Celsius
The melting point of the element Xenon is 111.8 degrees Celsius
The liquid xenon hasn't color.
xenon is stable compound.......
It is rare and stable.
You get a mixture of gases. Now...you can halogenate xenon if you're willing to heat the mixture to somewhere between 400 and 600 degrees Celsius and hold that temperature for many hours. But if you just mix xenon and, say, chlorine? You get a tank with xenon and chlorine in it.
Xenon is gas but can be present in liquid form in specific circumstances
Xenon, like all the noble gases except helium, already has a stable octet!
Yes. Helium, Xenon, and Neon have stable electron numbers (octette rule).
In its ground state it does have a stable octet.