no
Hydrogen is the lightest chemical element. It has an atomic number of 1 and is the most abundant element in the universe.
Copernicium is an artificial chemical element.
Hydrogen would be my educated guess, considering it is the simplest and most abundant element in the universe.
Thorium is a natural chemical element; chemical elements were formed by stellar nucleosynthesis at the beginning of the universe.
The lightest chemical element is hydrogen. It has an atomic number of 1 and is the most abundant element in the universe. It is a colorless, odorless, and highly flammable gas.
No, it is a colorless, highly flammable gaseous element, the lightest of all gases and the most abundant element in the universe.
It occurs in nature, as the "fifth most abundant chemical element in the universe by mass" [Wikipedia].
Hydrogen is a chemical property because it is a pure substance and it cannot be broken down into simpler substances by physical means. It is the simplest and most abundant chemical element in the universe.
The chemical property described is called flammability.
What is the question exactly? If it is about Uranium having physical and/or chemical properties, the answer is that it has both. Every single element and compound in this universe has both physical and chemical properties.
There are 94 naturally occurring chemical elements in the universe. These elements range from hydrogen, the most abundant, to uranium, the heaviest naturally occurring element.
the letter H represents the element Hydrogen