- In a modern Periodic Table (after IUPAC rules) lanthanoids are placed above actinoids.
- Before uranium are placed thorium, protactinium, actinium, etc.
- After uranium are neptunium, plutonium, americium, curium, etc.
There is no group number to Uranium though its group name is Actinide.
Uranium does not have a group it belongs to, but it is in period 7.
Actinoids, and Uranium is in no period.
No Its a Actinolds, aka rare earth element
Uranium is a member of the actinoids family; period 7, block f, no group number.
Uranium is a member of the actinides family of elements.
In the group of actinides uranium, actinium, protactinium and thorium are natural elements; the others (transuranium elements) are artificial elements.
There is a group of elements in the periodic table as the elements with same properties are clubbed together.
Synthetic elements are found in the group of transuranium elements, which are elements with atomic numbers higher than uranium (92) on the periodic table. These elements are artificially created in a laboratory through nuclear reactions and have unstable nuclei.
Gallium is in group 13 of the periodic table. The other elements in this group are Boron, Aluminum, Indium, and Thallium.
Yes it is a group is a family remember that when dealing with the periodic table.
2 elements