No. Silicon and neon are two completely different elements.
No. Its a heap of gases such as Hydrogen, Helium, Iron, Nickel, Oxygen, Silicon, Sulfur, Magneseum, Carbon, Neon, Calcium, and Chromium.
nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, silicon, neon, phosphorus, argon, bromide, fluorine, carbon
Silicon and oxygen, in this form. SiO2 Silicon dioxide.
Magnesium has 12 protons and 12 or so neutrons depending on the isotope. An alpha particle has 2 protons and 2 neutrons. So if magnesium loses 2 protons by shooting off an alpha particle, it will move 2 places down the periodic table and become neon. Neon has 10 protons.
no it is not a nonmetal. Silicon is a metalloid
There is no compound of neon and silicon. Neon does not form compounds.
Silicon has 14. Germanium has 32. You figure it out.
No because Neon already has 8 valence electrons.
Aluminum
Si + Ne => N.R.
Silicon, if you're counting metalloids. Phosphorus if you're not.
Magnesium
no. neon is an inert noble gas. Neon isn't compatible with any other substances!
Silicon is very common in the universe and is shares almost all the qualities of carbon.
No. Its a heap of gases such as Hydrogen, Helium, Iron, Nickel, Oxygen, Silicon, Sulfur, Magneseum, Carbon, Neon, Calcium, and Chromium.
nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, silicon, neon, phosphorus, argon, bromide, fluorine, carbon
Among these, neon and argon are most stable, as they are noble gases and have completely filled orbitals.