Yes,Ge is present on the periodic table.It is known as Germanium.It has atomic number of 32.
Aluminum, Germanium, Antimony, and Polonium are what Al, Ge, Sb and Po stand for on the periodic table.
That stands for Germanium which is a chemical element. Its represented as atomic number 32. It is mineral cataloged as a metalloid in the carbon group.
'Ge' . Found in the Periodic Table in Group 4' below silicon.
No, rubidium is not considered a transition metal. It is not located in the periodic table where the other transition metals are, which is mainly the d-block.
Lead (Pb) has a greater atomic radius than germanium (Ge) because atomic radius generally increases down a group in the periodic table. Lead is located below germanium in the periodic table, so it has more electron shells and a larger atomic radius.
Aluminum, Germanium, Antimony, and Polonium are what Al, Ge, Sb and Po stand for on the periodic table.
The metal category is found to the left of the "zigzag line" formed by the metalloids (B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te. Po). Everything on the left side of the Periodic Table except Hydrogen is a metal.
The metal category is found to the left of the "zigzag line" formed by the metalloids (B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te. Po). Everything on the left side of the Periodic Table except Hydrogen is a metal.
Germanium
there is no Go on the periodic table, there is Gd, Ga, Ge, but no Go. Hope this helped!
Metalloids (B, Si, As, Sb, Ge, Te) are placed to the righton the periodic table.
Metalloids (B, Si, Ge, As, Sb, Te, Po) are placed in the periodic table - beings chemical elements.
That stands for Germanium which is a chemical element. Its represented as atomic number 32. It is mineral cataloged as a metalloid in the carbon group.
Yes there is. About 74% of the periodic table is metals.
yes there are liquid metals on the periodic table. for example mercury
Sodium is an alkali metal, group 1 in the periodic table of Mendeleev (not a transition metal !).NO!
Chlorine is a non-metal. It is placed in group-17 of the periodic table.