React chemically.
Noble gases actually have the most stable electronic configurations in the periodic table due to having a full outer shell of electrons. This full octet makes them less likely to react with other elements, earning them the name "noble gases."
Neon is the most chemically stable of the three as it is a noble gas and typically does not form chemical bonds with other elements. Sodium is more reactive, readily forming compounds, while oxygen also readily reacts with other elements to form compounds.
The noble gases, such as helium and neon, do not typically bond with other elements due to their stable electron configuration. They have a full outer electron shell, making them chemically unreactive.
Noble gases differ from other elements in that the number of electrons that are attached to the core is exactly right. Most elements have either too much or too few electrons to fill their shells (rings of electrons surrounding the nucleus). Noble gasses therefore do not interact with other elements to shed, share or steal electrons like other elements do. Under normal conditions these gases do not react with any other element, and it is therefore that no one ever isolated a noble gas until 1895.
I like boys just as much as you do :) But i dont like boys :(
Not much. Noble gases have full valence shells, or full outermost shells, so they don't tend to bond with many other elements. They are also the most stable of all the element families.
Not much. Noble gases have full valence shells, or full outermost shells, so they don't tend to bond with many other elements. They are also the most stable of all the element families.
Yes, MOST matter is extremely stable. There are exceptions however, the most obvious of which is uranium (there are plenty of other unstable elements (elements with an extremely short half-life), but uranium has become popularized because it is one of the most unstable). Matter that is particularly unstable is used in nuclear reactions, because it is much easier to split than stable matter. For example, although there is enough matter in a piece of chalk that if transformed into pure energy would level a city, the atoms are so stable that it is seemingly impossible to release this energy.
None. Hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon are all elements. Elements do not contain other elements.
Noble gases have completely filled orbitals. 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.
No, it is not possible for a compound to contain all the elements in the periodic table. Compounds are composed of specific elements in fixed ratios, and combining all the elements together would not result in a stable compound due to the differing chemical properties of each element.
$230 unlocked and i dont know how much it is other ways