You just get a gas mixture of argon and hydrogen. Being less dense, the hydrogen will rise above the argon.
When argon and sodium are mixed, they do not react chemically because argon is an inert gas and sodium is a highly reactive metal. The two substances would essentially remain separate in the mixture.
Not just the two but along with hydrogen, yes.
Argon (Ar), Hydrogen (H) and uranium (U) are chemical elements. Water (H2O) is a chemical compound.
When nitrogen is mixed with argon, the properties of the mixture will depend on the ratio of the two gases. Argon is a noble gas that is inert and does not react easily with other substances, while nitrogen is also relatively inert. The resulting mixture would most likely retain characteristics of both gases without any significant chemical reactions occurring.
When hydrogen and xenon are mixed, they will not react with each other as they are both inert gases. The gases will remain as separate entities in the mixture.
This must be a typo of some sort. No, argon is not "a hydrogen," whatever that means.
Hydrogen, followed by oxygen. Argon is unreactive.
BOOM.
calcium is solid. argon and hydrogen are gases
When argon and sodium are mixed, they do not react chemically because argon is an inert gas and sodium is a highly reactive metal. The two substances would essentially remain separate in the mixture.
Not just the two but along with hydrogen, yes.
Neptunium react with hydrogen forming hydrides with formulas between NpH2 and NpH3.
chalky white precipitate
argon is used in lamps
Argon (Ar), Hydrogen (H) and uranium (U) are chemical elements. Water (H2O) is a chemical compound.
Hydrogen is not a noble gas.
You will get water and argon. Hydrogen an oxygen will readily and violently combine to form water. Argon is an inert gas, and so will not combine with other elements.