xenon is not toxic, it is in the air we breath in.
Xenon was discovered in 1898 shortly after William Ramsay and Morris Travers discovered krypton and neon. Xenon is a trace element in the Earth's atmosphere. Xenon is found in atmosphere of planet Mars and Jupiter. Xenon can be forced into a solid metallic phase by extreme pressure, as much as several hundred kilobars. In its metallic state, xenon has a sky blue color. There are more than forty radioactive isotopes of xenon. Due to electrical excitement, xenon is used in high-powered lamps and flash lamps such as photography strobe lights. While inert and not readily reacting with other elements, xenon and oxygen compounds can be toxic and explosive.
Xenon (Xe) has an atomic number of fifty-four. It is an odorless, colorless, noble gas that gives off a blue glow when electrified in a vacuum tube. Xenon is the most dense of all the noble gases and the most expensive. Xenon comes from the Greek word-Xenon, meaning stranger, and from the Greek word-Xenos, meaning strange. While inert and not readily reacting with other elements, xenon and oxygen compounds can be toxic and explosive. Xenon is found in the atmosphere of the Earth, the Mars and the Jupiter. Xenon found in meteorites also serves as an indicator of solar system formation. Several of xenon's unstable isotopes are produced from the fission of uranium and plutonium, and therefore result from a nuclear explosion.
Xenon- atoms Xenon tetrafluoride- molecules
No, xenon is inert.
Xenon is a anion
No. It is a non-toxic gas. However, some of its compounds - although difficult to produce - are toxic.
No. Xenon is chemically inert and therefore nontoxic. However, like any other gas it takes up space and can therefore displace oxygen. Such a lack of oxygen can be fatal.
Xenon was discovered in 1898 shortly after William Ramsay and Morris Travers discovered krypton and neon. Xenon is a trace element in the Earth's atmosphere. Xenon is found in atmosphere of planet Mars and Jupiter. Xenon can be forced into a solid metallic phase by extreme pressure, as much as several hundred kilobars. In its metallic state, xenon has a sky blue color. There are more than forty radioactive isotopes of xenon. Due to electrical excitement, xenon is used in high-powered lamps and flash lamps such as photography strobe lights. While inert and not readily reacting with other elements, xenon and oxygen compounds can be toxic and explosive.
Xenon (Xe) has an atomic number of fifty-four. It is an odorless, colorless, noble gas that gives off a blue glow when electrified in a vacuum tube. Xenon is the most dense of all the noble gases and the most expensive. Xenon comes from the Greek word-Xenon, meaning stranger, and from the Greek word-Xenos, meaning strange. While inert and not readily reacting with other elements, xenon and oxygen compounds can be toxic and explosive. Xenon is found in the atmosphere of the Earth, the Mars and the Jupiter. Xenon found in meteorites also serves as an indicator of solar system formation. Several of xenon's unstable isotopes are produced from the fission of uranium and plutonium, and therefore result from a nuclear explosion.
Xenon Difluoride
Xenon Trioxide
Xenon- atoms Xenon tetrafluoride- molecules
Xenon forms xenon hexafluoride, XeF6
xenon is colourless
John Xenon
Xenon is a gas
xenon