it would totally explode! no just kidding. it would probably hurt you chemically if you did that considering that it has radium and neon. so just don't do it unless you ask like, a really good chemist or scientist or something. it could explode though.
Under standard conditions of temperature and pressure, nothing.However under conditions of unusually high temperature and pressure a metastable compound neon fluoride can form.
Fluorine and bromine have 7 valence electrons and hence their properties are similar. Neon has 8 valence electrons and the properties are different from that of fluorine.
neon is most stable
Neon
This gas is neon.
Any reaction occur between neon and fluorine.
Nothing :) Neon is a noble gas, meaning that it doesn't react with anything.
flourine must gain one electron
Under standard conditions of temperature and pressure, nothing.However under conditions of unusually high temperature and pressure a metastable compound neon fluoride can form.
No- fluorine is a halogen and Neon is an inert or noble gas. Fluorine is one of the most reactive elements of all and Neon is the 2nd most unreactive after Helium. You can not get more different.
The first Ionization energy of fluorine is less than that of the helium and neon.
Fluorine and bromine have 7 valence electrons and hence their properties are similar. Neon has 8 valence electrons and the properties are different from that of fluorine.
Oxygen (air) turns Radium black. Radium-Bromide makes air glow green like neon.
No because neon is a noble gas so it only forms with helium,Argon and Hydrogen and that doesnt make Fluorine
neon is most stable
Neon
neon