Noble Gases are useful because they make up chemical elements.
No. Neon is a noble gas and is unreactive.
Helium, Neon, Xenon, Krypton, Radon, and Argon.
Noble gases are, for all intents and purposes, unreactive - there are a few noble gas compounds but you have to really work at it to convince noble gases to form bonds. Fluorine is an extremely reactive gas, hence it is not a noble gas. It is a halogen - the most reactive halogen of them all.
The unreactive elemnyt in period 3 is Argon, Ar, a noble gas
Argon is the unreactive gas that makes up 1 percent of the Earth's atmosphere. It is a noble gas and is commonly used in applications where an inert atmosphere is required, such as in light bulbs and welding.
Helium
No. Neon is a noble gas and is unreactive.
No. Neon is a noble gas and is unreactive.
It is because zeon is a noble gas &unreactive
He- helium it is a noble gas (very unreactive)
Neon (Ne) is a noble gas, very unreactive.
Helium, Neon, Xenon, Krypton, Radon, and Argon.
In short, an element's valence shell is full and most stable when it contains eight electrons (this stability is the reason that the noble gases are so unreactive).
All the noble gases are in the atmosphere: He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn.
Argon is a noble gas, argon is highly unreactive
You need to re-phrase your question, since argon is a nobel (or relatively unreactive)gas.
Helium is considered the most unreactive gas because it is a noble gas with a full outer electron shell, making it very stable and unlikely to react with other elements.