Not really but some of the papers relating to it were published in "Physics & Astronomy".
"Production of Francium". Francium. SUNY Stony Brook Physics & Astronomy. 2007-02-20.
Francium is an element, it does not 'create' anything.
Francium isn't in anything since it explodes instantly with a slight movement and it doesn't last long in nature.
Anything outside the Earth is astronomy.
Francium is a highly reactive and radioactive metal that is very rare in nature. It is found in minute quantities in uranium and thorium ores. It has also been produced in laboratories through nuclear reactions.
Not known today but probably francium don't burn.
anything that enters a black hole will be compresed
In astronomy its anything that is NOT self illuminating (i.e, is not a star).
Francium has not applications and the oxide cannot be prepared.
Astronomy doesn't DO anything - it simply studies the way things are and tries to figure out how things got that way, and what will happen next.
Francium is a metal.
Francium was named after France, the country it was dicovered in.
The chemistry of francium is not known; francium has properties similar to caesium.