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no actually there are some elements that chemists can't give a name to or found yet . In years to come there will be things changed but for now it stays the same
No, Pluto is too cold for liquid water. Any water there would be frozen into ice.
Chemists don't create new elements at all. They discover them. The thing is, nearly every element that can be discovered already has been. About all they can discover now are new isotopes of existing elements. What chemists create are new compounds. The compounds are for whatever things that are needed, like medicines, industrial chemicals, insecticides, and so on.
First, get two 2 liter bottles. If you have a smaller soda bottle with smoth edges, this will work as well. You need 2 of them though! Now, Get a metal washer and glue it to the lip of one of the bottles. Whatever glue -should- work. Hot glue, super adhesive, even school glue! Now, fill that bottle about half-way with water. Get your other bottle now, and either use hot glue, electrical tape, or duct tape to put it on top of the washer. Now it's built. Now spin the bottles around in the shape of a funnel, with the water-filled bottle on top. Now set it down some where, and you have a cyclone! You can also put glitter in the water if desired.
The list of household products that have been improved by chemists is a lengthy, unending list! For example, women in the 1800s scrubbed their floors and the laundry with lye soap and a bucket of water. Now, a couple store aisles hold all the cheminal cleaners available to help clean the house and do the laundry. As well, women hung wash outside on clotheslines--rain or shine. There was no "fabric softeners" -- unless the rain water happened to be particularly clear that day. Now, we have liquid and paper type fabric softeners.
Now that depends entirely on how big the bottles are.
I was told by a boots assistant that the manufacturers of syndol said that the backlog of legislation was beginning to clear and it shouldn't be long now before syndol was back in the chemists.
Chemists, during the history of science; now the rules for naming are recommended by IUPAC.
Now liquid uranium has not applications.
water is a solid then it melts now it is a liquid
Please explain what you mean ny "drift bottles" then maybe someone can help you much better than I am doing now.
The liquid is mercury; it has now been replaced with a cheaper and safer chemical.
Worcestershire Sauce
The best electron microscopes now can show us surfaces with individual atoms. This sort of technology will be invaluable when chemists start developing nano-scale engineering, allowing them to monitor the progress of the construction and visualise the function of these nano-machines.
Nansen bottles
Melissa Baars did she is now a millionaire and has a flash car and good career
8 ounces = 1 cup (1 bottle) 2 cups = 1 pint (1x2 = 2 bottles) 2 pints = 1 quart (2x2 = 4 bottles) 4 quarts = 1 gallon (4x4 = 16 bottles) 1 gallon = 16 8oz bottles x5 x5 5 gallons = 80 8oz bottles theres the math. Now the easy way. 80 8 ounce bottles can be filled from 5 gallons of medicine.