Yes, we will forever be adding new elements to the periodic table as we figure out new ways to make them; however, most of what you see now will stay the same.
The rows are used to study the change in trends. There are 7 periods in periodic table.
No its a chemical change
The density properties generally change as you go down the columns of the Periodic Table by increasing.
The nuclear charge decreases as you move down a group in the periodic table.
The periodic table may change over time as new elements are discovered or as our understanding of atomic structure evolves. New elements can be added to the table, and their properties may lead to a reorganization of the elements. The overall layout and concepts of the periodic table are likely to remain consistent, but the specific details can change.
It is named The PERIODIC TABLE. The periods being the horizontal rows The groups being the vertical columns.
Changes in the number of protons in an element's nucleus would alter its position on the periodic table. The discovery of new elements could lead to the expansion of the periodic table. Advances in technology and research may also reveal new properties of known elements, potentially causing revisions to the periodic table.
Yes most certainly
Atomic number
The melting temperature properties generally change as you go from left to right in the periodic table by going down/decreasing.
No, because as the days and years go past, more scientists will find out more information on the periodic table. When they find out information on the periodic table, sometimes new elements are found, adding new elements on the periodic table causes it to change.
A group in Periodic Table is the column of element in periodic table