At room temperature, fluorine and chlorine are gases, bromine is a liquid, and iodine and astatine are solids.
At room temperature and pressure, fluorine and chlorine are gases, bromine is liquid and iodine is a solid
Halogens like fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine exist in different states of matter at room temperature: fluorine and chlorine are gases, bromine is a liquid, and iodine is a solid.
They are completely different Noble gases are colorless, monoatomic gases; the halogens are diatomic, colored and there form at room temperature is F, gas, Cl, gas, Br, liquid I, solid. Nobel gases are chemically unreactive, helium and neon have no known compounds, a few very reactive compounds are known for the rest. The halogens are all reactive, fluoringe is the most reactive. One or more of the halogens will form compounds with all of the other elements apart from the noble gases. (apart from He and Ne)
At room temperature the lighter halogens, F, Cl are diatomic gases, Br is a liquid, I is a solid. All of the halogens are colored and toxic. The noble gases are all colorless odorless non chemically toxic monoatomic gases. (Radon is radioactive).
No. halogens are not inert gases. Halogens are group 17 elements. Inert gases or noble gases are the group 18 elements Helium (He), neon (Ne), argon (Ar), krypton (Kr), xenon (Xe) and radon (Rn) are the six inert gases.
No, not all halogens are gases at room temperature. Fluorine and chlorine are gases at room temperature, bromine is a liquid, and iodine is a solid.
I do not know so don't ask this question again
The halogens that are gases at room temperature and pressure are fluorine and chlorine.
No, not all halogens are gases. Fluorine and chlorine are gases at room temperature, while bromine is a liquid and iodine is a solid.
Gases
Liquids or gases.
the elements which are very hot and freeze when very cold ,they are the elements which are gases at room temp.
depends on what type of gas some of them are gases until cool them but most of them are gases at room temp
At room temperature and pressure, fluorine and chlorine are gases, bromine is liquid and iodine is a solid
Halogens like fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine exist in different states of matter at room temperature: fluorine and chlorine are gases, bromine is a liquid, and iodine is a solid.
halogens are much more reactive
They are completely different Noble gases are colorless, monoatomic gases; the halogens are diatomic, colored and there form at room temperature is F, gas, Cl, gas, Br, liquid I, solid. Nobel gases are chemically unreactive, helium and neon have no known compounds, a few very reactive compounds are known for the rest. The halogens are all reactive, fluoringe is the most reactive. One or more of the halogens will form compounds with all of the other elements apart from the noble gases. (apart from He and Ne)