Gold is not a halogen it is a transition metal
iodine is the only halogen in solid form. so it is the halogen which gives violet vapours on sublimation...
The halogen in period 6 is astatine. It is a radioactive element and is the rarest naturally occurring halogen on Earth.
Fluorine is the halogen present in Teflon.
A halogen pan is a type of cookware that is compatible with halogen cooktops. They are usually made of stainless steel or special heat-conductive materials to maximize heat transfer and efficiency. Halogen pans are designed to work well with the specific heating properties of halogen stovetops.
Chlorine is a halogen.
Gold is a transition metal, not a halogen. Transition metals are elements found in the d block of the periodic table, while halogens are found in group 17. Gold is specifically located in the d block as an element with atomic number 79.
The different types of halogen bulbs available in the market include standard halogen bulbs, halogen floodlights, halogen spotlights, and halogen capsule bulbs.
iodine
Any element, other than a halogen is - by definition - not a halogen and so it does not have a halogen and that is less than one halogen.
No, Bromine is a Halogen
Halogen.
This halogen is astatine.
Halogen is a gas, so your question doesn't make much sense. If you're asking about a halogen (light) bulb, then the answer is: mainly halogen.
Halogen gas is in a Tungsten-Halogen Light Bulb.
Bleach as a chemical substance is NOT an halogen. However, it contains in combination, the halogen 'chlorine'. The 'sharp clean ' smell you have with bleach is a few molecules of chlorine gas being released. It is chlorine gas that cleans and disinfects. In a fume cupboard, have a piece of litmus paper, be it red or blue etc., Allow it to come into contact with a puff of chlorine gas. It will go white/colourless'.
Bromine. It is a red/brown/orange liquid. It is only one of two elements that are liquids at STP. The or being Mercury/'Quicksilver'/Hydragyrum(Hg).
iodine is the only halogen in solid form. so it is the halogen which gives violet vapours on sublimation...