It looks like black rock. It has one of the highest melting points of the light metals.
Beryllium is a white-gray metallic element.
It has a white-gray metallic appearance.
Yes. It is the compound of the elements Beryllium and fluorine.
1s2 2s2: Two of its electrons are in the first s orbital and the remaining two are in the second s orbital.
At room temperature beryllium is a solid metal, white-grey color.
Steel gray metal.
It has a white-gray metallic appearance.
Yes. It is the compound of the elements Beryllium and fluorine.
1s2 2s2: Two of its electrons are in the first s orbital and the remaining two are in the second s orbital.
We know that the alkaline earth metal beryllium (Be) and the halogen chlorine (Cl) form the ionic compound beryllium chloride (BeCl2). The equation might look like this:Be + Cl2 => BeCl2
Beryllium is a metal at room temperature and therefore like all metals has no odor.
At room temperature beryllium is a solid metal, white-grey color.
All you have to do is look at which group Beryllium is in and look at the other elements that are in the same column. The gruop of an element can help you determine its chemical properties. That group would be Group 2 with Beryllium, Magnesium, Calcium, Strontium, Barium, and Radium.
The beryllium is not actually a coating on the window of an x-ray tube, it is the window of the x-ray tube. Beryllium is essentially invisible to x-rays, just like glass is essentially invisible to visible light. Just like we use a glass window to let sunlight in and keep the bugs out of our house, x-ray tubes use beryllium windows to let the x-rays get out of the tube and keep the air out of the tube (x-ray tubes have a vacuum on the inside, just like a light bulb does).For more information, take a look at:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beryllium#Radiation_windows
The atomic/proton no. of beryllium is 3. Thus the number of protons is 3.
there are many different things like bombs, missiles, guns, beryllium bronze, and many more
probably hydrated beryllium salts like BeCl2.H20
Beryllium. And it's an element, not a chemical.