The materials are the symbols and atomic no.
Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley was an English physicist. He developed the Law in X-ray Spectra that helped sort the chemical elements of the periodic table of the elements in a logical order.
Ummm, the periodic table is mostly abbreviations of greek words for the periodic table eg. Au (Gold) is short for Aurum. (Useless info: this is where the English word for aura came from to represent a sort of inner shine that gold seemed to have)
you can't really. But if you need to then you can take the different kinds of skittle colors and make them in the shape of the PT (periodic table) and the sort the colors into alkaline metals, alkaline metals, metalloids, nonmetals, noble gases, transition metals, and inner transition metals. I would reccomend looking at a periodic table with color first.
A periodic table is used to sort the 114 elements known to man. It is sorted in groups (alkalis, halogens, noble gases) and according to the number of electrons the elements have.
Sort of. On the one hand, particle physicists can create almost arbitrarily heavy nuclei, and these will continue to be added onto the end of the periodic table and named after important people as they are created. However, all the stable elements, ie all those that last more than a tiny fraction of a second before falling apart into something else, most likely are already on the periodic table, and it's only really these ones that are relevant to most of science.
Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev created a periodic table to sort elements.
Because he was a good scientist
it is some sort of Compound found in elements on the periodic table
The function of a periodic table is to organize and sort elements. It also gives you important information about each element.
ascending atomic weight, what the element reacts to and how
Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley was an English physicist. He developed the Law in X-ray Spectra that helped sort the chemical elements of the periodic table of the elements in a logical order.
Ummm, the periodic table is mostly abbreviations of greek words for the periodic table eg. Au (Gold) is short for Aurum. (Useless info: this is where the English word for aura came from to represent a sort of inner shine that gold seemed to have)
you can't really. But if you need to then you can take the different kinds of skittle colors and make them in the shape of the PT (periodic table) and the sort the colors into alkaline metals, alkaline metals, metalloids, nonmetals, noble gases, transition metals, and inner transition metals. I would reccomend looking at a periodic table with color first.
A periodic table is used to sort the 114 elements known to man. It is sorted in groups (alkalis, halogens, noble gases) and according to the number of electrons the elements have.
Dmitri Mendeleev was a chemist who is best known for being the first one to sort and set up the Periodic Table of Elements.
I don't think there is a SCIENCE version of platinum but if your looking for the element platinum look for the periodic table of elements. I am sort of confused by your Q.
Dmitri Mendeleev was a chemist who is best known for being the first one to sort and set up the Periodic Table of Elements.