Certainly. If someone discovers, or creates, a new element it'll be added to the table. Remember, most of the elements that are on it now were "new" at one point.
The first Periodic Table published by Mendeleev had about 60 elements, and he left gaps in his table where it seemed there were elements that had not been discovered. His crowning accomplishment was using his table to predict what properties those elements would have.
The most recent official addition to the periodic table was Copernicium (112, Cn) in 1996.
No. That would require having a non-integer number of protons in the nucleus, which is impossible.
this question has yet to be answered.
no
The periodic table of elements was created by Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist, in 1869. He arranged the elements based on their atomic mass and properties, and left gaps for elements that were yet to be discovered. Over time, new elements were discovered and added to the periodic table by various scientists.
There were 102 known elements on the periodic table in 1960.
No, because as the days and years go past, more scientists will find out more information on the periodic table. When they find out information on the periodic table, sometimes new elements are found, adding new elements on the periodic table causes it to change.
There are 91 metals in the periodic table today, but new ones are added as time passes.
There are many relatively new elements that have been added to the periodic table over the last few decades, like the element Copernicium, a man made element that was discovered by the Gesellschaft fur Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in 1996. And although there have not been any discoveries in the last 14 years, there are quantum physicists that spend there time looking for the next element.
The Noble Gases, It added a new "Group" to the periodic Table.
The system of the periodic table is not changed after the addition of a new element.
The system of the Periodic Table is not changed after the addition of a new element.
The modern periodic table of the elements was published by Dimitri Mendeleev in 1869. Several new elements have been discovered and added to the table since then.
New elements have been discovered or synthesized and added to the Periodic Table.
PeuPeuKarlrulez777:they need to be discovered somewhere in the world
The system of the Periodic Table is not changed after the addition of a new element.
The periodic table of elements was created by Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist, in 1869. He arranged the elements based on their atomic mass and properties, and left gaps for elements that were yet to be discovered. Over time, new elements were discovered and added to the periodic table by various scientists.
If new elements are placed, then they would be appended in the periodic table. It won't disturb existing periodic table.
A group is a column in the periodic table of elements.
There were 102 known elements on the periodic table in 1960.
No, because as the days and years go past, more scientists will find out more information on the periodic table. When they find out information on the periodic table, sometimes new elements are found, adding new elements on the periodic table causes it to change.