No, Xenon is a gas at 0 oC. It condenses to a liquid at -108 oC
At room temperature (around 25 degrees Celsius), the element that will condense when cooled from 100 degrees Celsius is water. Water vapor at 100 degrees Celsius will condense into liquid water when cooled to room temperature due to the lower temperature causing the vapor to lose energy and convert back to its liquid state.
Hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, neon, phosphorus, sulphur, chlorine, argon, bromine, krypton, iodine, xenon, mercury, astatine and radon are all gases as 500 deg C.
Xenon difluoride or XeF2 is a potent fluorinating agent. It is one of the most stable compounds of xenon and is also used as an isotropic gaseous etchant for silicon.
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Octane is the only thing that can be decomposed by chemical means.
The boiling point of xenon is -108 oC (minus 108) so at 20oC it will be a gas.
At normal pressure, between 161.4 K and 165.1 K.
Xenon has a melting point of -111.9 degrees Celsius.
The melting point of the element Xenon is 111.8 degrees Celsius
Xenon is a gas at 25 degrees Celsius.
At 20 degrees Celsius, xenon is in a gaseous state. Xenon is a noble gas that exists as a gas at room temperature and pressure.
The flash point of xenon is -62.8 degrees Celsius (-81 degrees Fahrenheit).
At 25 degrees Celsius, xenon is a gas. Xenon is a noble gas that has a boiling point of -108.1 degrees Celsius and remains in a gaseous state at room temperature.
At normal pressure, between 161.4 and 165.1 K.
At 1000 degrees Celsius, xenon is in the gaseous state. Xenon is typically a gas at room temperature and pressure, and it remains gaseous even at higher temperatures like 1000 degrees Celsius.
165.03 K, −108.12 °C, −162.62 °F at 1atm(0 sea level air pressure)
Xenon's boiling point is -162 degrees Celsius or -259 degrees Fahrenheit.