Xenon is a gas at room temperature.
The normal phase of xenon is a gas at room temperature and pressure.
At 101.325 kPa, the melting point of xenon is 161.40 K or -111.75 °C or -169.15 °F. At 101.325 kPa, the boiling point of xenon is 165.051 K or -108.099 °C or -162.578 °F. It is a Gas in normal phase or at STP.
Xenon can change state of matter through changes in temperature and pressure. At room temperature and pressure, xenon is a gas. By lowering the temperature below its boiling point of -162 degrees Celsius, xenon can be turned into a liquid. Further reducing the temperature or increasing the pressure can turn xenon into a solid.
The chemical formula for xenon tetroxide is XeO4. It is a yellowish crystalline solid that is highly explosive and primarily exists as a dimer, Xe2O8, in the gas phase.
Xenon is a gas at room temperature.
The normal phase of xenon is a gas at room temperature and pressure.
The answer depends on what is meant by "normal phase".
Xenon is normally found as a gas at room temperature and pressure.
It is an element.
Xenon (Xe) is a nonmetalic gas. it has the atomic number of 54 with the atomic mass of 131.239.
Xenon is found in bright fluorescent lights. Xenon is a liquid.
Under high pressure - around 150 gigaPascals - xenon turns metallic. In this phase it has a blue colour.
Xenon is a gas at room temperature, with a boiling point of -161.5°C and a melting point of -111.9°C.
Xenon is a gas at room temperature, so in its normal phase it is typically around 0.006 times the temperature in Celsius, due to the conversion factor from Kelvin to Celsius.
Xenon is in the gas phase at room temperature and normal atmospheric pressure.
At 101.325 kPa, the melting point of xenon is 161.40 K or -111.75 °C or -169.15 °F. At 101.325 kPa, the boiling point of xenon is 165.051 K or -108.099 °C or -162.578 °F. It is a Gas in normal phase or at STP.