Technetium react with oxygen, halogens, oxygen, sulfur, selenium, tellurium, boron, carbon etc. and can form alloys with metals.
I don't know any nickname for technetium.
yes it can
Technetium, Promethium, and all elements heavier than Bismuth.
Promethium, Technetium, and any element heavier than Bismuth.
Any household items contain technetium.
Any time you see the atomic mass of an element in brackets on the periodic chart, that number represents the mass number of the longest-lived or best-known isotope of that element. In other words there is no stable isotope, i.e. all forms of it are radioactive.
Copper is an element in and of itself - you can't "mix" any other substances to get it. Copper is mixed with zinc to make brass, or with tin to make bronze.
Lead is an element. The fact that it comes as shot, or fishing weights, or curtain weights, or some other form does not make it any thing other than an element. When it is mixed with other substances to create lead crystal, then it is a mixture.
Chemical Element: technetium(Modern Latin: from Greek, technetos, "artificial"; the first man-made artificial element; radioactive metal)Chemical-Element InformationSymbol: TcAtomic number: 43Year discovered: 1937Discovered by: Emilio Gino Segré (1905-1989), an Italian physicist, and Carlo Perrier of Italy.Element 43 (technetium) was predicted on the basis of the periodic table by Mendeléyev.He suggested that it should be very similar to manganese and gave it the name eka-manganese.Technetium was erroneously reported as having been discovered in 1925, at which time it was named masurium.The element was actually discovered by C. Perrier and Emilio Gino Segrè in Italy in 1937.It was found in a sample of molybdenum bombarded by deuterons.Technetium was the first element to be produced artificially and all its isotopes are radioactive.It is named after the Greek word technetos, meaning "artificial".
Technetium. All atoms of Technetium have 43 protons in their nulceus (this is the meaning of atomic number). In addition, Technetium atoms may have any thing from 50 to 56 neutrons depending upon the isotope.
Technetium hasn't a specific value to human culture.
In chemistry another name for Tc-99 doesn't exist.