Neon is used in many things.
Such as:
Glow lamps
Signs
Glow sticks
Electron tubes
Plasma studies
Clothing
Neon is used for fill in neon bulbs.They are used to make colourful bulbs.
Neon can be used to light neon signs and to light glow lamps. :)
Some everyday uses for neon are in the billboards we see while we are driving down the road. It is also in the electric signs typically hung up in gas station windows that say,"OPEN". Neon, mixed with hydrogen, makes a gas that is put in refigerators.
When you go to your local nuclear facility and eat the waste infected soil surrounding it, you may "bump into" traces of californium. This however is NOT a GOOD IDEA, for Cf is a strong emitter of neutrons. You should strenuously avoid contact with this material.
Nowhere. Francium is the second rarest element in the Earth's crust, next to Astatine. There is only 20-30g of it in the Earth's crust at any one time.
the air is nitrogen and we bump into it everyday life
Curium is not used in everyday life.
Coal
it is in a lot of metals
Lawrencium has any use.
Neon is used for fill in neon bulbs.They are used to make colourful bulbs.
Neon can be used to light neon signs and to light glow lamps. :)
While using flash lamps.
Table salt! (NACl - Sodium Chloride)
You don't really need neon in everyday life, however when electrically charged they do make nice red neon signs, for example outside restaraunts.
Some everyday uses for neon are in the billboards we see while we are driving down the road. It is also in the electric signs typically hung up in gas station windows that say,"OPEN". Neon, mixed with hydrogen, makes a gas that is put in refigerators.
Fluorine is found in toothpaste and everyday tap water. Fluoride in water, known as water fluoridation, is believed to reduce tooth decay and cavities so many governments allow controlled fluoride to be added into national water supplies. See the related link below.