beryllium is a metal similar in colour and appearance to magnesium.
Helium does not burn in a flame test because it is an inert gas and does not react with the flame to produce a characteristic color.
Lilac to Purple-Red
Its like Mg, it has no colour. So bright light
the color of the flame produced when you burn rubidium is tha same color OS what potassium produce-the colour violet
Beryllium is in fireworks. Beryllium is used in fireworks to change the color of the effect to a white color.
Helium does not burn in a flame test because it is an inert gas and does not react with the flame to produce a characteristic color.
A pink color from the spectral lines of lithium.
A lilac-violet color
Strontium burns with a bright red color in a flame test.
Red
The flame of beryllium is colorless because beryllium does not emit visible light when it is heated. Unlike other metallic elements that can produce characteristic flame colors due to electronic transitions, beryllium’s electronic structure does not allow for such transitions in the visible spectrum. Instead, any energy absorbed may result in excitation of electrons to higher energy states, but these transitions involve higher energy photons, which are outside the visible range. As a result, beryllium appears to burn without producing a colorful flame.
Lilac to Purple-Red
Depending on the metal in the chloride (Na, Ca, Sr, Li, ....).
Cesium burns with a lilac or bluish-violet flame in a flame test.
When Magnesium chloride is burnt in a Bunsen flame, it imparts no colour in the flame.
Its like Mg, it has no colour. So bright light
the color of the flame produced when you burn rubidium is tha same color OS what potassium produce-the colour violet