Want this question answered?
Halogens are extremely reactive, noble gases are very unreactive. All noble gases are gases; only F and Cl are gases.
No; each chemical element has different properties.
The are both 'noble' gases, elements with the full compliment of electrons in their outer electron shells.
Noble gases exist at mind-bogglingly low temperatures. To prove something's malleable, you have to hammer it or something. If you could obtain a solid noble gas, one whack of a hammer would be enough to literally vaporize all hopes of proving it was malleable. How many licks does it take? The world may never know.
the noble gases have octet configuration ie they have 8 electrons in their outermost shell ,so they are stable
Halogens are extremely reactive, noble gases are very unreactive. All noble gases are gases; only F and Cl are gases.
No; each chemical element has different properties.
All of the noble gases have similar chemical properties; helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon.
yes all noble gases are non metals in the sense that they are not metals ,but they are in no way similar to nonmetals that they should be grouped together , they are after all the noble in nature . :)
The are both 'noble' gases, elements with the full compliment of electrons in their outer electron shells.
They are all noble gases.
Noble gases exist at mind-bogglingly low temperatures. To prove something's malleable, you have to hammer it or something. If you could obtain a solid noble gas, one whack of a hammer would be enough to literally vaporize all hopes of proving it was malleable. How many licks does it take? The world may never know.
the noble gases have octet configuration ie they have 8 electrons in their outermost shell ,so they are stable
The noble gases all have eight electrons and are all in the eight column.
All noble gases are gases in their standard state
They are helium atoms and have all the properties of helium. Helium is mono-atomic [as are all of the noble gases] Non-noble gases [those gases that react with other elements/compounds] are diatomic meaning that in the gaseous state the atoms are paired on to another.
All the members of the noble gases family (group 18 of the periodic table) are gases at room temperature.