1 Hydrogen 2 Helium 3 Lithium 4 Beryllium 5 Boron 6 Carbon 7 Nitrogen 8 Oxygen 9 Fluorine 10 Neon 11 Sodium 12 Magnesium 13 Aluminum 14 Silicon 15 Phosphorus 16 Sulfur 17 Chlorine 18 Argon 19 Potassium 20 Calcium 21 Scandium 22 Titanium 23 Vanadium 24 Chromium 25 Manganese 26 Iron 27 Cobalt 28 Nickel 29 Copper 30 Zinc 31 Gallium 32 Germanium 33 Arsenic 34 Bromine 36 Krypton 37 Rubidium 38 Strontium 39 Yttrium 40 Zirconi 41 Niobium 42 Molybdenum 43 Technetium 44 Ruthenium 45 Rhodium 46 Palladium 47 Silver 48 Cadmium 49 Indium 50 Tin 51 Antimony 52 Tellurium 53 Iodine 54 Xenon 55 Cesium 56 Barium 57 Lanthanum 58 Cerium 59 Praseodymium 60 Neodymium 61 Promethium 62 Samarium 63 Europium 64 Gadolinium 65 Terbium 66 Dysprosium 67 Holmium 68 Erbium 69 Thulium 71 Lutetium 72 Hafnium 73 Tantalum 74 Tungsten 75 Rhenium 76 Osmium 77 Iridium 78 Platinum 79 Gold 80 Mercury 81 Thallium 82 Lead 83 Bismuth 84 Polonium 85 Astatine 86 Radon 87 Francium 88 Radium 89 Actinium 91 Protactinium 92 Uranium 93 Neptunium 94 Plutonium 95 Americium 96 Curium 97 Berkelium 98 Einsteinium 100 Fermium
And here are the other nine for free
101 Mendelevium 102 Nobelium 103 Lawrencium 104 Rutherfordium 105 Dubnium 106 Seaborgium 107 Bohrium 108 Hassium 109 Meitnerium
Oxygen 64.6 grams / 100 gram body weight Carbon 18.0 g / 100 g Hydrogen 10.0 g / 100 g Nitrogen 3.1 g / 100 g Calcium 1.9 g / 100 g Phosphorous 1.1 g/ 100 g. Source: "Chemistry in Context" 5th Ed McGraw Hill, page 488 Trace elements (minerals) Chromium, manganese, cobalt, nickel, arsenic, selenium, iodine... (page 510)
To determine the order of elements in a molecular formula, consider the standard conventions: carbon is typically listed first, followed by hydrogen, then other elements in alphabetical order. It is important to know the symbols and names of elements to correctly identify their order in a formula.
To generalise, the substances that we actually need to survive in the first place is oxygen and water. These consist of hydrogen atoms and oxygen. Carbon is also very important as most things are made from carbon (along with other elements).Also, elements such as berylium, boron and lithium are not necessary but they are in the first 6 elements.Technically, the answer is no (but some of the elements are very important as I have said above).
The first element in a spinal reflex is the sensory receptor, which detects a stimulus. The last element is the effector, which carries out a response to the stimulus.
To find out how many mph is 100 yards in 11 seconds: First, convert 100 yards to miles (100 yards = 0.057 miles). Next, calculate the speed by dividing the distance (in miles) by the time (in hours) - 0.057 miles / (11 seconds / 3600 seconds) = 19.64 mph.
There are 118 known elements, not 100 types of atoms. Elements are made up of atoms with specific numbers of protons in the nucleus. The first 92 elements occur naturally, with the rest being synthetic and created in laboratories.
Yes, in the same sense that there are 99 elements and 10 elements. MORE than 100 elements are known.
"The" 12 elements is wrong. There are over 100 elements.
It is 2^100 because each of 100 elements can either be in or out. By the way the answer is 2^100-101, because there is one subset with no elements at all (the empty set)!
yh that is true there is about 100 elements that we KNOW of! To be precise there are actually 117 known elements! :) hope that helped
A single dimension array is an array with one dimension. It is a collection in memory of one or more elements of the same type. int array[100]; declares an array of int's of size 100 elements. The elements are referenced as array[0], the first one, through array[99], the last one.
As of December 2016, there are 118.
There are just over 100 elements in the Periodic Table
about 100
100% of the contents of the oceans is made up of elements.
There are 92 natural elements, but there are more than 100 elements if included synthetic ones.
It has about over 100