One is magnesium. Other is Strontium. One below and one above Calcium in periodic table column.
The element that fits this description is chlorine, which is a highly reactive halogen with properties similar to those of magnesium. Chlorine is located in the same period as bromine (Group 17, Period 4) in the periodic table.
The newest officially discovered elements are Ununquadiumand Ununhexium so, we'll focus on those.Ununquadium will be part of the Carbon series, so we would expect it to have properties similar to those elements (e.g. 4 electrons in the outer shell). The closest relation to it in that group would be Lead.Ununhexium will be part of the Oxygen series, so, again, we would expect it to have properties similar to those elements (e.g. 6 electrons in the outer shell). The closest relation to it in that group would be Polonium, which is also the first radioactive element.
No, calcium is not a ferrous metal. Ferrous metals are those that contain iron, such as steel. Calcium is a chemical element that is an alkaline earth metal, not a ferrous metal.
Bart would have properties more similar to those of the element Twee because they are both nonmetals with similar atomic structures and chemical behaviors. Grom, being a metal, would have different properties from those of Twee.
CaBr is a compound (two or more elements bonded together), and apart from that it's name is calcium bromide. Except those two bonded would probably be CaBr2 , which would be called calcium dibromide
The element that fits this description is chlorine, which is a highly reactive halogen with properties similar to those of magnesium. Chlorine is located in the same period as bromine (Group 17, Period 4) in the periodic table.
The newest officially discovered elements are Ununquadiumand Ununhexium so, we'll focus on those.Ununquadium will be part of the Carbon series, so we would expect it to have properties similar to those elements (e.g. 4 electrons in the outer shell). The closest relation to it in that group would be Lead.Ununhexium will be part of the Oxygen series, so, again, we would expect it to have properties similar to those elements (e.g. 6 electrons in the outer shell). The closest relation to it in that group would be Polonium, which is also the first radioactive element.
blah
Fluorine.
who the hell knows... and who honestly cares
No, calcium is not a ferrous metal. Ferrous metals are those that contain iron, such as steel. Calcium is a chemical element that is an alkaline earth metal, not a ferrous metal.
Bart would have properties more similar to those of the element Twee because they are both nonmetals with similar atomic structures and chemical behaviors. Grom, being a metal, would have different properties from those of Twee.
Buttholes
atoms in the same group are similar. calcium is in group 2, so it's similar to Be, Mg, Sr, Ba and Ra. Most similar would be Mg or Sr, which are right above and below. all group 2 atoms share a similar electron configuration
Some chemical properties of calcium is that it's highly reactive. I have searched some other chem. properties but all i get is a good conductor, soluble, and an alkaline earth metal. but those are PHYSICAL properties, so I've only found that it's reactive as a chemical property.
Calcium properties resemble those of magnesium more than those of potassium. Both calcium and magnesium are alkaline earth metals, sharing similar characteristics such as having two valence electrons and exhibiting metallic bonding. In contrast, potassium is an alkali metal with one valence electron, leading to different chemical behavior and reactivity. Thus, while there are similarities among all three, calcium is more closely related to magnesium.
CaBr is a compound (two or more elements bonded together), and apart from that it's name is calcium bromide. Except those two bonded would probably be CaBr2 , which would be called calcium dibromide