No it is there in the corner of the Periodic Table because it isn't like the rest of the elements. It's got some properties of nonmetals but not all of them so it can't be classified as a non metal and it can't be a metalloid because it doesnt have any of the properties of a metal(solid, shiny etc.). And its there because they needed a way to start the periodic table what better way to start then #1
There is no boble gas notation for hydrogen and helium. The noble gas notation starts for elements after helium. The noble gas notation is a notation formed as a result of the electron configuration notation being used in conjunction with noble gases. The noble gas preceding the element in question is written then the electron configuration is continued from that point forward.
No, it is a noble gas
Argon is a noble gas
Neon is a noble gas.
helium is a noble gas, so it doesn't have a noble gas, it is one.
He Helium is a noble gas
There is no boble gas notation for hydrogen and helium. The noble gas notation starts for elements after helium. The noble gas notation is a notation formed as a result of the electron configuration notation being used in conjunction with noble gases. The noble gas preceding the element in question is written then the electron configuration is continued from that point forward.
No, it is a noble gas
S. H. Noble has written: 'The collected works of S. H. Noble'
Yes, argon is a noble gas. It is a colorless, odorless, and non-reactive gas that is part of the noble gas group on the periodic table.
no. it is a molecule, not a noble gas
A noble gas is colorless.
Argon is a noble gas
Neon is a noble gas.
Samuel H. Noble has written: 'Life and adventures of Buckskin Sam. (Samuel H. Noble.)'
John H. Noble was born in 1923.
John H. Noble died in 2007.