The element from the Periodic Table of elements the glows in electricity, is Argon (Ar).
It also can be boron (B), because when you mix boron with hydrogen flames it glows a bright green.
I also think it might be Krypton (Kr) because it is an inert element which produces a whitish glow in lights.
So, it might be Krypton (Kr), Argon (Ar), or Boron (B).
Any gas or the vapor of any solid or liquid element will glow due to ionization/relaxation if placed in an electric current at a high enough voltage. The lines of the spectrum of this glow uniquely identify the element. Not all glow with visible light however (e.g. Mercury vapor glows in the ultraviolet). Also beta radiation (electrons) will cause any gas or vapor it passes through to glow blue or violet from cherenkov radiation, depending on the energy of the beta radiation.
Phosphorus is the element that make things glow in the dark.
Neon makes glowing signs. It is a noble gas. Atomic number of it is 10.
Ne
Neon!
that's easy, curium
phosphorus
Phosphorus.
Phosphorus
It is impossible, it is only a label for publicity.
If the color is red, the element is neon, a noble gas.
Neon is used for bright flashing signs such as advertising signs.
The noble gases are used in illuminated (aka Neon) signs. Refer to the related link to see an illustration of the colors made by the different noble gases.
If you are talking about covalent bonded molecules, then you would call them polar molecules. This means one element is hogging the shared electrons more than the other. This would make one element partially charged positively, and the other element partially charged negatively The signs to show partially charged looks like an incomplete 8.
on the periodic table it is element 10. Ne ring a bell? also found in any bars that have signs in them. on the periodic table it is element 10. Ne ring a bell? also found in any bars that have signs in them.
neon
The orange colored lights seen along roadways use sodium. The white colored lights usually use mercury.
A company name Georgia Custom Signs makes them. The either fasten to your house or under you mailbox. I have also seen them a lot in my neighborhood and surrounding area they are able to help 911 find homes easier in rural areas.
probably neon because of all the neon signs they use there, or oxygen, a lot of times pure oxygen is pumped into casinos to make the players feel good, or nitrogen considering it makes up 78% of the atmosphere
Any of the noble gases. This can be Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon or even Radon. Neon, for example, makes red. Krypton makes a blue colour.
neon lights and signs wouldn't work without Mercury ''the element''. neon lights and signs wouldn't work without Mercury ''the element''.
The gases are what glow. The electricity starts to ionize the gas and that's what creates the bright glowing.
No. Neon is a gas, commonly found in those signs that looks like they're made out of glowing tubes.
It is impossible, it is only a label for publicity.
Neon is a noble gas and is inert (or generally unreactive). It is the tenth element on the periodic table. It is an atom.A more in-depth scope of neon:It has the electron configuration of [He]2s22p6. This gives Neon a full electron shell of the highest energy level. This makes neon exceptionally stable as a gas.In nature, neon is a monoatomic gas. This means it is found usually not bonded with another neon atom like oxygen (O2) and other gases.Neon's spectra that it gives off when excited (by electrons becoming more energized) is seen as a bright light. Its general color in a cathode tube is seen as bright red to reddish-orange. This makes it useful in neon signs (neon signs actually contain different inert gases responding to energized electrons giving off different colors).
Neon.