Yes, the 92 naturally occurring elements will not change. The structure of an atom of any element wiil not change.
It would be the 10th element in the periodic table, Neon.
all elements after uranium (atomic number 92) are radioactive.
i know a song about it it is "do u know the first ten elements of the periodic table there's hydrogen, helium, lithium, borileam, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, florine, and neon"
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Glenn T. Seaborg contibutedto the periodic table by discovering 8 different elements. He discovered americium (95), curium (96), berkilium (97), californium (98), einsteinnium (99), fermiuim (100), mendelevium (101), and nobelium (102). Element 106, seaborgium, bears his name.
If "number ten" refers to atomic number, then the answer is Neon.
Refer to the related link.
Md - Mendelevium
All except neon and helium
It would be the 10th element in the periodic table, Neon.
all elements after uranium (atomic number 92) are radioactive.
i know a song about it it is "do u know the first ten elements of the periodic table there's hydrogen, helium, lithium, borileam, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, florine, and neon"
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There are 92 naturally occurring elements in the periodic table of the elements. Each element differs from the next by the number of protons within its nucleus. Hydrogen has one proton. Helium as two. Next comes Lithium, Beryllium, Boron, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Flourine, and Neon, rounding out the first ten. Google "periodic table" for a complete list.
The same thing as one fifth of any ten things - two.
The last metal in the periodic table that is available in nature is uranium with atomic number 92.The newly discovered element, that doesn't have an official name yet, so scientists are calling it ununpentium, based on the Latin and Greek words for its atomic number, is having atomic number 115. The man-made 115 was first created by Russian scientists in Dubna about ten years ago.
No, it's not (Halley's is a periodic comet, but its period is shorter than that, by about ten years).