Fluorine is a gas at room temperature and it looks pale yellow.
Under normal conditions no because the hydraulic fluid is usually oil based. In conditions that are not normal like space or lab conditions that are beyond normal temperature yes there could be a chance, but very unlikely.
Noble gases have completely filled orbitals / energy levels. They generally have 8 valence electrons (helium has only 2) and have stable electronic configuration. Hence they are chemically inert and generally donot form compounds under normal conditions. However noble gases like krypton and xenon will bind with highly electronegative elements like oxygen and fluorine.
Yeast like to grow in warm and moist conditions.
Based on the other elements in the same group, like helium and neon, you can predict that it is a gas under normal conditions, and it is not chemically reactive.
Diatomic elements are unique because they are the only seven elements that, when the atoms are under normal conditions in the elemental state, form pairs of atoms. Most elements are organized into crystalline structures, like metals, metalloids and solid nonmetals, or lone gaseous atoms, like the noble gases. Hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, iodine and bromine form H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2, I2, and Br2, respectively. They are also all of the elements that are non-noble gases at normal pressure and temperature, with the exception of bromine, which is a liquid.
Xenon is chemically inactive under STP. But under extreme conditions it reacts with more electronegative elements like fluorine and oxygen to from compounds like XeF2, XeOF4, XeF4, XeF6 etc.
Depends on the person. Normal voltage would be something like 30 v.
Xenon is generally chemically inert at STP. But under extreme conditions of high temperature it reacts with fluorine and oxygen forming compounds like XeOF2, XeF4, etc.
Pure arsenic is usually "grey arsenic". It looks like, well, a metal. Other allotropes do exist, but quickly transform into grey arsenic under normal conditions.
Fuse wire is designed to open under over current conditions. Just like a fuse.
Under normal conditions no because the hydraulic fluid is usually oil based. In conditions that are not normal like space or lab conditions that are beyond normal temperature yes there could be a chance, but very unlikely.
Noble gases have completely filled orbitals / energy levels. They generally have 8 valence electrons (helium has only 2) and have stable electronic configuration. Hence they are chemically inert and generally donot form compounds under normal conditions. However noble gases like krypton and xenon will bind with highly electronegative elements like oxygen and fluorine.
No it's doesn't like that. It is a gas in normal conditions.
Noble gases have completely filled orbitals / energy levels. They generally have 8 valence electrons (helium has only 2) and have stable electronic configuration. Hence they are chemically inert and generally donot form compounds under normal conditions. Mainly elements like krypton or xenon form compounds with highly electronegative elements like fluorine and oxygen
Yeast like to grow in warm and moist conditions.
It is a brown liquid under normal conditions,fluorine and chlorine are gases iodine is a solid. The other non metals are gases or solids. Chemically it is similar to the other halogens, forming compounds with Br- ion, forming a single covalent bond is compounds like methyl bromide. Bromine- a non metal liquid at room temperature.
Many gaseous elements form diatomic molecules: hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, as well as vapors of other elements not gasses under standard conditions like bromine, iodine, etc.