No. Radon is chemically inert.
Chlorine can react with water to produce a mixture of hydrochloric acid and hypochlorous acid. If the reaction is not controlled, the buildup of these acidic compounds can create a rapid release of gas, causing an explosive reaction. This is why chlorine should always be handled and mixed with water carefully in controlled environments.
It would expand and then explode. sorry Explode :P
it will explode so call 911
Radon doesn't react with water but it is soluble in water.
Well I'm just guessing so yeah i think that explode
Silver wouldn't explode at all in water! Unless it were the alkali/alkaline earth metals they would.
Radon is an important problem for the atmosphere in the buildings not for the water. Radon from the water can be eliminated by boiling the water. Also because the most important isotope pf radon, 222Rn, has a half life of only 3,8235 days radon disappear after a period of time.
Radon is a gas, water is a liquid. Under the same conditions radon should be many hundreds of times less dense than water. Water's density at STP is about 1 000 kg/m3. Radon's density at STP is about 9.73g/m3. Thus, water is about 103 times denser than radon.
Radon is not abundant. Earth crust: 4.10-19 kg radon/kg of rocks Sea water: 4.10-22 kg radon/L of water
it would explode due to genital warts
Because it would cause the universe to explode
Radon is released from rocks and then absorbed/dissolved in waters.