Xenon produces a beautiful blue glow when excited by an electrical discharge. Xenon lamps have applications as high-speed electronic flash bulbs used by photographers, sunbed lamps and bactericidal lamps used in food preparation and processing. Xenon lamps are also used in ruby lasers. Xenon difluoride is used to etch silicon microprocessors. Xenon ion propulsion systems are used by satellites.
in the real world
SCIENCE!
Yes on getjar.com there is an application
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Xenon produces a beautiful blue glow when excited by an electrical discharge. Xenon lamps have applications as high-speed electronic flash bulbs used by photographers, sunbed lamps and bactericidal lamps used in food preparation and processing. Xenon lamps are also used in ruby lasers. Xenon difluoride is used to etch silicon microprocessors. Xenon ion propulsion systems are used by satellites.
Yes. XeF2 (xenon difluoride), XeF4 (xenon tetrafluoride), and XeF6 (xenon hexafluoride) are all real compounds. XeF4 was in fact the first noble gas compound to be discovered.
Xenon is found in the Earth's atmosphere and it is extracted from liquified air.
Elevators are an example of an Atwood machine.
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How can the lemon battery project be applied in the real world
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You will have to get someone else to turn on your lights for you to check. i think xenon flickers right when you turn them on and then becomes real bright from xenon being a gas.