Rubidium is not a component of table salt.
Sodium (Na) and chlorine (Cl) form to make table salt.
The mass of the table salt can be calculated by subtracting the mass of the container from the combined mass of the table salt and the container. So, 124g - 9g = 115g. Therefore, the mass of the table salt is 115g.
Na (Sodium) is combined with Cl (Chlorine) to make NaCl (table salt).
Table salt is a pure substance. It is combined in such a way that it is uniform and definite in composition.
yes
Rubidium metal would react with iodine to make rubidium iodide , according to the equation: 2 Ru + I2 -> 2 RuI
Table salt is a pure substance. It is combined in such a way that it is uniform and definite in composition.
This element is sodium (Na).
This element is chlorine (Cl).
chloride. to form SoudiumChloride. aka. table salt :)
Common salt, or table salt is sodium chloride, so you would combine sodium with chlorine.
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.)