Pure rubidium wouldn't be something to taste - it's explosively reactive with, well, just about everything. However, rubidium when it is in a compound with a halogen (like chlorine, or fluorine) makes a salt, and it will taste salty/bitter and appear like a white granular solid (like table salt.)
the odor of rubidium
cottage cheese!
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Rubidium hypochlorite is the name for this chemical formula.
Rb is the symbol for the element, rubidium.
Rb is rubidium, O is oxygen. They will combine to form Rb2O which is called rubidium oxide.
Rubidium iodide
Rubidium is a neutral atom in its elemental form. The rubidium ion, found in rubidium compounds, is smaller than a neutral rubidium atom.
Rubidium hypochlorite is the name for this chemical formula.
Rb is the symbol for the element, rubidium.
Rb is rubidium, O is oxygen. They will combine to form Rb2O which is called rubidium oxide.
I don't think Rhenium is very odorous because it is a silvery-white metal with one of the highest melting points (3186 °C) of all elements, exceeded by only tungsten and carbon. Its boiling point is even higher: 5596 °C, which indicates a very, very low partial vapor pressure at STP. (Btw. can you smell pure gold or platinum?)
Rubidium is an element and so it is made of nothing but rubidium.
Rubidium iodide
Rubidium is not flammable.
Rubidium is a neutral atom in its elemental form. The rubidium ion, found in rubidium compounds, is smaller than a neutral rubidium atom.
Rubidium's symbol is Rb.
Rubidium
That is the formula. Rubidium fluoride (RbF) has a chemical formula of RbF.
The word equation for the reaction of rubidium with water is rubidium + water --> rubidium hydroxide + hydrogen. Rubidium is a metal that reacts very quickly and fiercely, even explosively with water.