Robert Bunsen was born on the 30th of March 1811 in Gottingen,
Germany. Robert was the youngest of four sons,
he
was one of the most appreciated scientists of his generation. He was a great teacher, dedicated to his students. He liked to work quietly in his laboratory, continuing to improve his science with useful discoveries. He never married.
Bunsen
started studying in chemistry, and received his university degree at 19 years of age. After graduation, he traveled throughout Europe to study engineering, geology and chemistry. One of his first discoveries was in physiological chemistry when he discovered the iron oxide hydrate as a medicine for arsenic poisoning.
Bunsen's discoveries added to his scientific knowledge because he would make mistakes trying to invent or create something new and he would make mistakes and that will help him learn more about what he was trying to create.
Robert retired at the age of 78 and was
88 years old when he died on the 16th of August 1899,
Robert Bunsen was a German chemist who made the Bunsen burner that was named after him.
That would be Bunsen then
The elements cesium and rubidium.
yes
Radium is a chemical element Polonium is a chemical element Those two were discovered by Marie Curie
What are the two regions in a Bunsen burner? The two regions in a Bunsen burner flame are: 1.An outer transparent, dim blue cone. 2.An inner,less transparent, brighter greenish-blue cone. This relatively non luminous,cone shaped flame is a combustion of carbon-hydrogen fuel which is used in a Bunsen burner to provide heat for laboratory purposes.
Two examples are: sodium carbonate and calcium hydroxide.
Two.(Two carbons, one oxygen so just two elements.)
If two elements are joined together it is a compound
Robert Bunsen did NOT invent the Bunsen burner. It was his assistant Peter Desaga, who developed it. He discovered two new elements, the metals caesium and rubidium.
Caesium and Rubillion
Cesium was discovered by two men named Fustov Kirchoff and Robert Bunsen, in the year 1860.
the radium and the polonium
German chemists Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff discovered rubidium in 1861 by the newly developed method of flame spectroscopy Rubidium was discovered in 1861 by German chemists Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff through flame spectroscopy. Flame spectroscopy involve taking the substance to be analzed, coating a wire in it, and holding the wire inside of the flame of a Bunsen Burner (guess who invented this! See above). The color of the flame is then recorded.
In 1860, cesium was discovered by two chemists named Robert Wilhelm Bunsen and Gustav Robert Kirchhoff through spectroscopic analysis. These chemists did not invent this element, which has an atomic number of 55.
Radium is a chemical element Polonium is a chemical element Those two were discovered by Marie Curie
he discovered it i believe because of some accidental spill between the two compounds wenis and gina
What are the two regions in a Bunsen burner? The two regions in a Bunsen burner flame are: 1.An outer transparent, dim blue cone. 2.An inner,less transparent, brighter greenish-blue cone. This relatively non luminous,cone shaped flame is a combustion of carbon-hydrogen fuel which is used in a Bunsen burner to provide heat for laboratory purposes.
only two holes
basically, the zinc electrons in the NaOH solution coat the copper penny and then when you wave it over a Bunsen burner, the two metals form an alloy (a homogeneous mixture with two or more elements) and make brass, not gold.
The substances of methane (CH4), also known as natural gas, and air (O2) mix to start a Bunsen Burner.