Xenon is used in Electron tubes, bactericidal lamps, strobe lamps, xenon lamps for surgery, and vehicle headlights (more so in planes and boats).
Xenon is used for making electron tubes, stroboscopic lamps, lamps used to excite ruby lasers for generating coherent light. Xenon is also used in the nuclear energy field in bubble chambers, probes, and other applications where a high molecular weight is of value. The perxenates are used in analytical chemistry as oxidizing agents.
Xenon is used in strobe lights and also in Photography
Xenon is one among the inert gas family. It can be used in discharge lamps to produce green light. This green light would be used in ruby laser to take Chromium atoms to excited level.
It is used in several different applications including the AeroSpace industry, as a propellant, as a general anesthetic and in the production of arc lights.
Xenon is a non-metallic noble gas
It is a noble gas.
Xenon is a noble gas. It belongs to noble gas family or group 18 on the periodic table.
No. Xenon is a noble gas, which means it does not react with anything.
No. Xenon is an odorless gas, as are all noble gases.
A noble gas.
Xenon is a noble gas, not an acid.
xenon
It is a noble gas.
Xenon is a non-metallic noble gas
It is a noble gas.
It is a noble gas.
Xenon is a non-metal, an inert (or noble) gas. Xenon is not a metal
Xenon ( At no 54 ) forms the maximum number of compounds for an noble gas
Xenon is a noble gas. It belongs to noble gas family or group 18 on the periodic table.
The noble gas in the fifth period is Xenon (Xe). It weighs 131.29g/mol.
Xenon is a noble gas, so its noble gas configuration would be [Xe] Its configuration using the short-cut method would be [Kr]5s24d105p6