No, Element 117 (ununseptium) is speculativelyconsidered to be in the halogen family, which is highly reactive-- the opposite of the noble/inert gasses. However, as it has only just been discovered, no confirming tests have been conducted to clarify the nature of 117.
The noble gas configuration for element 117 (Tennessine) is [Rn] 5f^14 6d^10 7s^2 7p^5. This means it has the same electron configuration as Radon up to its 5f electron level, followed by the filling of the 6d and 7s orbitals, and finally with 7p orbitals.
There are no experiments done with Ununseptium to know, to which family it goes. This element can be halogen or noble gas or chalcogen. This may be known with some upcoming experiments with this element.
A noble gas.
Argon is a noble gas; it hardly combines with any other element.Argon is a noble gas; it hardly combines with any other element.Argon is a noble gas; it hardly combines with any other element.Argon is a noble gas; it hardly combines with any other element.
The element with the densest noble gas is radon (Rn). It is a radioactive noble gas that is heavier than the other noble gases, making it the densest.
Element 118 is a noble gas, which means it would be largely unreactive. Only a few atoms of this gas have been synthesized.
The tenth element is the noble gas Neon. It is represented by the chemical formula Ne.
The element nitrogen is closest to the noble gas neon on the periodic table.
noble gas - hence element
Ni, Nickel is NOT a representative element.
no boron is not a noble gas but it is a nonmetal
Magnesium element has no relation with noble gas. But Mg2+ ions and noble gas neon are isoelectronic.