Elemental bromine is an orange liquid and is in group VII, the Roman equivalent to 7, in narrow form periodic tables. In the now more commonly used extended form periodic tables, in which columns are usually given Arabic numeral numbers, bromine is in column 17, and every element in column 7 in column 7 is a transition metal and is solid at standard temperature and pressure.
If you mean group 7A, the element that is a liquid at room temperature is bromine.
Bromine is the only liquid element in Group 7 (also known as Group 17) of the periodic table. It is a reddish-brown volatile liquid at room temperature, and it is the only nonmetallic element that is liquid under normal conditions.
The element in group 7 period 5 is element 43, Technetium (Tc). Its chemical symbol is Tc.
Group one elements are the most reactive with group 7 elements as it is the easiest way for the elements to complete their outer shell as the group one element gives its extra electron to the group 7 element and then the group 7 element has a full shell too.
The element is iodine (I). It is in group 7 of the periodic table and has 5 energy shells.
Element group 1 is called the alkali metals, while element group 7 is called the halogens.
The element in period 4, group 7 of the periodic table is Manganese (Mn).
copper
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Group 7. Fluorine, which belongs to group 7, is the most reactive element.
there is no element found in such a place because that spot doesn't exist. there is a period 4-7 but not 1-3 for group 6. that particular spot is open and doesn't include any elements
If you think to sodium chloride (NaCl), sodium is from the first group and chlorine from the nine group.