Seaborgium is considered a transition metal.
Seaborgium is a metal. It is a synthetic element that is not found naturally on Earth and is part of the transition metals group.
Seaborgium is a synthetic element that belongs to the category of transition metals on the periodic table. It is a highly radioactive metal and is the heaviest element in the actinide series.
No, gold is not considered a transition element. Transition elements are the d-block elements in the periodic table, while gold is a representative element in the s-block.
No, it is not. Helium is a nonmetal, a noble gas
The element with 106 protons is Seaborgium, which is a synthetic element that does not occur naturally. It is a transactinide element with the atomic number 106 and is highly radioactive.
Seaborgium is a metal. It is a synthetic element that is not found naturally on Earth and is part of the transition metals group.
Seaborgium is a synthetic element that belongs to the category of transition metals on the periodic table. It is a highly radioactive metal and is the heaviest element in the actinide series.
Transition
Transition
representative
No, chromium is not a representative element. It is a transition metal located in the d-block of the periodic table.
Any element that is in one of the representative elemenet groups is a representative element. A representative element group is any of the groups 1-2, 13-18, i.e. not a transition metal. So, a representative element is an element that isn't a transition metal.
Krypton is a noble gas and is classified as a representative element.
The chemical symbol of seaborgium is Sg.
Oxygen is not a transition element, it is a representative element. Representative elements are found in the s and p blocks of the periodic table, while transition elements are found in the d and f blocks. Oxygen is found in Group 16 of the periodic table.
No. its a noble gas.
Carbon is a representative element. It is located in group 14 of the periodic table, which is a group of representative elements also known as the "carbon group". Transition elements are typically found in the d-block of the periodic table.