Some dinoflagellates give off light. A chemical reaction in the cells produces light similar light produced by a firefly. water filled with these dinoflagellates glows like a twinkling neon light.
Neon is chemically inert and doesnt combine with lithium
The unstable ion (NeHe)+ is known.
An example is the helium-neon laser.
in the case of neon, outer most orbit is completely filled .so it does combine with any other element hence
Examples are helium, neon, argon.
=will neon combine with other elements=
Neon has completely filled orbitals. It is chemically inert and does not combine with other elements.
None. Neon doesn't form any compounds.
It is not reactive at all. It will not combine with other elements.
The unstable ion (NeHe)+ is known.
Neon is chemically inert and doesnt combine with lithium
Depends on the purpose. But if you combine neon with helium, and obtain a helium-neon laser, you can see that it is much smaller than a xenon laser.
An example is the helium-neon laser.
Neon is chemically inert and does not combine with other elements (including itself). It exists as a mono atomic gas.
in the case of neon, outer most orbit is completely filled .so it does combine with any other element hence
Neon does not react with water. It doesn't react with anything.
No, dirt is not a compound of neon. Neon is an inert gas, and, like all noble gases, it doesn't generally want to combine with anything. Dirt is a mixture of many substances and compounds.