Einsteinium and mendelevium, Thorium, Curium, Fermium, Rutherfordium, Bohrium, Seaborgium, etc., etc.
-Fermium : it was named after nuclear physicist Enrico Fermi -Einsteinium: it was named after Albert Einstein -Mendelevium: it was named after Dimitri Mendeleev :-) :p <3
Three (of many) sources for the names of the elements are: 1. The name of the place where it was discovered (eg, Hassium: symbol Hs; at no 108, at wt 277 ~ its was named after Hesse, Germany) 2. The name of the scientist who discovered it (eg, Bohrium: symbol Bh; at no 107; at wt 277 ~ named for Neils Bohr) 3. An ancient name carried forward (eg, Gold: symbol; Au; at no 79; at wt 197 ~ named for Aurum, the Latin word for gold, just translated to different more modern languages.)
Scientists arrange elements into metals, nonmetals, and metalloids based on their physical and chemical properties. Metals are typically good conductors of electricity, nonmetals are poor conductors, and metalloids have properties of both metals and nonmetals.
Please list the three elements in your question when you resubmit.
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen - the three basic elements for organic material.
Einsteinium, Lawrencium, and Californium are three elements that were named after the same place.
Three elements named after places are Copper, Berkelium, and Californium
Bill Nye does not have an element named after him. The other three scientists (Albert Einstein, Lise Meitner, Enrico Fermi) have elements named after them (Einsteinium, Meitnerium, Fermium).
Einsteinium, Lawrencium, and Nobelium to name but three.
There are no elements named after places since an element is atoms which are all the same not a mixture of two types of atoms nor a compound which is more than three.
They were named after the greek god poopoo
-Fermium : it was named after nuclear physicist Enrico Fermi -Einsteinium: it was named after Albert Einstein -Mendelevium: it was named after Dimitri Mendeleev :-) :p <3
There are a great number of elements that can be found in a plant cell but not animal. This includes chloroplasts.
Francium(France), germanium(Germany), and europium(Europe).
Einsteinium and mendelevium, Thorium, Curium, Fermium, Rutherfordium, Bohrium, Seaborgium, etc., etc.
Three (of many) sources for the names of the elements are: 1. The name of the place where it was discovered (eg, Hassium: symbol Hs; at no 108, at wt 277 ~ its was named after Hesse, Germany) 2. The name of the scientist who discovered it (eg, Bohrium: symbol Bh; at no 107; at wt 277 ~ named for Neils Bohr) 3. An ancient name carried forward (eg, Gold: symbol; Au; at no 79; at wt 197 ~ named for Aurum, the Latin word for gold, just translated to different more modern languages.)
There are a great number of elements that can be found in a plant cell but not animal. This includes chloroplasts.