Most of the nonmetals, particularly the halides.
There should not be a reaction being that usually elements do not react with their nitrates. But if the calcium nitrate solution was acqueous (water), the calcium will react with the water and as I found in my class, turned black and appeared to react. It does not react with the nitrate but the solution's water.
No, not compared with neon.
Calcium. I know because I studied chemistry.
Argon is chemically inert due to the presence of completely filled orbitals. So it is does not react with other elements at STP.
Yes. Calcium will react vigorously with acid and even water.
Yes it does react strongly when bonding with other elements
No, they will not react when put together. This is because both calcium and copper are electropositive metals. No two electropositive elements or electronegative elements react under normal conditions.
There is no such molecule as Ca2. Calcium is simply Ca. Calcium will most likely react with CO2 to produce Calcium oxide and carbon. 2Ca + CO2 --> 2CaO + C.
There should not be a reaction being that usually elements do not react with their nitrates. But if the calcium nitrate solution was acqueous (water), the calcium will react with the water and as I found in my class, turned black and appeared to react. It does not react with the nitrate but the solution's water.
Argon is the least likely in the list to react with other elements, because argon is a noble gas and none of the other elements in the list is.
Nobel gasses.
No, not compared with neon.
Group-18 elements least react with other elements. They are inert in nature. They are called noble gases.Elements in group 18 are less likely to react with any other elements. This group is made out of the noble gases. Its members are He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe and Rn.
Calcium. I know because I studied chemistry.
Argon is chemically inert due to the presence of completely filled orbitals. So it is does not react with other elements at STP.
Yes: Calcium and magnesium are successive elements in the same wide form periodic table column.
no