The elements on the Periodic Table get stabler the closer you get to the noble gases because they have a strong pull to the nucleus making it hard for other elements to take away an electron, and a full shell making it difficult to add an electron, so the atoms do not react when they come in contact with other things.
The lightest element on the periodic table with no stable isotopes is hydrogen. It only has one proton in its nucleus and no stable isotopes.
Brass is an alloy of the elements copper and zinc. Alloys do not appear on the periodic table. Copper is an element with the symbol Cu and zinc is an element with the symbol Zn. They both appear on the periodic table.
No, androids is NOT an element or type of element. Perhaps you are referring to actinoids, which are a group of elements that appear in the periodic table.
No, if whatever you are looking for does not appear on the Periodic Table of Elements then it is not an element.
Helium is the element that is placed in period 1 and group 18 of the periodic table. It is inert in nature and hence stable.
False (Hydrogen has the first position, Helium is the most stable)
Mass number is a property specific to a particular isotope or nuclide of an element, while the usual periodic table include average properties for all the stable, naturally occurring isotopes of each element.
Yes, it is true.
J Q appears in some older periodic tables as 'Unq' (unnilquadium), the temporary name for what is now called Rutherfordium (At. no. 104).
The 103rd element on the periodic table is Lawrencium (Lr). It is a synthetic element and is named after Ernest O. Lawrence, a physicist who invented the cyclotron. Lawrencium is a radioactive element with no stable isotopes.
Element 110 on the periodic table is darmstadtium (Ds). It is a synthetic element that was first synthesized in 1994 by a German research team. Darmstadtium is a highly radioactive element with no known stable isotopes.
Carbon is the sixth element in the periodic table. Located between boron (B) and nitrogen (N), it is a very stable element. Because it is stable, it can be found both by itself and in many naturally occurring compounds. Scientists describe the three states of carbon as diamond, amorphous, and graphite.