I suppose you could, because you can turn anything into a liquid provided you have a significant source of heat or cold, but neon boils (turns from a liquid to a gas) at -410 degrees Fahrenheit (-246 degrees Celsius), so you'd need something very, very cold to turn neon into a liquid.
neon is a liquid at room temperatureneon is a liquid at room temperatureThis first answer is wrong, neon is a GAS at room temperature, NOT a liquid.
Neon condenses because it transitions from a gaseous state to a liquid state when it is cooled below its boiling point of -246.1 degrees Celsius. This causes the neon atoms to come together and slow down, forming a denser liquid phase.
Normally its a gas, but in a lite neon sign its a plasma.
No. because neon is a stable atom so it cannot form bond (combine) with any other atoms or moleculesor even it withself. neon is a gas, very rare gas in atmosphere it percentage is 0.0018 or so.by volume so it rare to be found in any common substances, but its found in neon lamps used in scientific laborotary
Neon was discovered by the british chemists Sir William Ramsay and Morris W. Travers in 1898 in London.
The element in gaseous or liquid neon is neon itself. Just the state of matter is different.
I think it is liquid
neon is a gas at room temp.
Neon is a gas a room temperature.
gas
neon is a liquid at room temperatureneon is a liquid at room temperatureThis first answer is wrong, neon is a GAS at room temperature, NOT a liquid.
Considering when a sample of the atmosphere was chilled until it became a liquid, and that liquid was warmed until Neon (along with other gases) were boiled off of it, Neon is not very common in nature.
Neon is a member of the noble gas family. Neon is used to make neon signs and television tubes. Liquid neon is used as a cryogenic refrigerant.
Neon has a boiling point of -246.1 °C below this temperature Neon would be in liquid state
Liquid neon boils at 27 degrees Kelvin, so no one's really sure how fast it expands.
no. it is a liquid
Gas