Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Chlorine, Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon
The three elements that exist in the gaseous state at room temperature are helium, nitrogen, and oxygen.
Examples: argon, nitrogen.
Because in gaseous state all the atoms are comparable. In natural state some atoms (Elements) exist in solid state some in liquid and some in gaseous state.
Gaseous chemical elements are nonmetals.
Neptune in the last of the gas giant planets..so gas.
The three elements that exist in the gaseous state at room temperature are helium, nitrogen, and oxygen.
They do not! Most gases do not emit radiation.
Examples: argon, nitrogen.
Depends what you mean - your question is not clear - but consider :- At STP Oxygen and Hydrogen are two elements in the gaseous physical state BUT their compound Water is in the liquid state. At STP Oxygen is gaseous and Iron is solid BUT their compound is Iron Oxide is solid. So the answer is no.
Radon is the densest gaseous element.
Most are solid, some are gaseous, and one or two are liquid.
metal -->nonmetal --> gaseous (metal --> nonmetal --> metalloid)
Because in gaseous state all the atoms are comparable. In natural state some atoms (Elements) exist in solid state some in liquid and some in gaseous state.
Gaseous chemical elements are nonmetals.
They get hot. If "very high" is high enough then they start existing as a fourth state of matter called "plasma". If "very high" is even higher than that they could break down into a quark-gluon plasma.
Both the elements exist in gaseous states at room temperatures.
Gaseous elements are typically found on the right side of the periodic table, in the nonmetals group.