Its name of NOBEL gas
"Type" is ambiguous in this context. Do you mean isotopes? Or do you mean states of matter? (Helium has some exotic states of matter.)Wikipedia states that there are 8 helium isotopes, to of them (3-He and 4-He) stable."Type" is ambiguous in this context. Do you mean isotopes? Or do you mean states of matter? (Helium has some exotic states of matter.)Wikipedia states that there are 8 helium isotopes, to of them (3-He and 4-He) stable."Type" is ambiguous in this context. Do you mean isotopes? Or do you mean states of matter? (Helium has some exotic states of matter.)Wikipedia states that there are 8 helium isotopes, to of them (3-He and 4-He) stable."Type" is ambiguous in this context. Do you mean isotopes? Or do you mean states of matter? (Helium has some exotic states of matter.)Wikipedia states that there are 8 helium isotopes, to of them (3-He and 4-He) stable.
Helium
There is no such thing as "conducting fire." Helium is not flammable, if that's what you mean.
it means that helium does not react with any other elements / compounds.
Helium comes from the Greek work, helios, meaning the sun.
Helium is derived from the Greek for the sun, helios, as it was discovered in the spectrum of the sun
helium
Helium is an element on the periodic table and is one of the basic building blocks of the universe. It is formed through nuclear fusion in stars, releasing helium during the process. On Earth, helium is extracted from natural gas deposits through a process called fractional distillation.
Do you mean helium? An inert ("noble") gas, atomic number 2. An alpha particle (as in radioactivity) is a helium nucleus.
It could possibly mean the element Helium or He as in reference to a male.
Helium has atomic number 2. That means the helium atom has 2 protons and two electrons. The standard atomic weight of helium is 4.002602, or 4.003 rounded to 3 decimal places.
If you mean Helium, no, it's a inert gas.