5 cents is nicknamed a nickel
Nickel is an element that has the same name as a US coin worth five cents.
The element in the same group as lithium (Group 1) and the same period as iron (Period 4) is potassium.
The element Neptunium has a word in its name ("Neptune") that refers to a planet discovered long ago, and the element itself was discovered around the same time.
Atoms of the same element cannot have different numbers of protons. Different numbers of protons mean different elements. An atom with the a different number of neutrons is called an isotope.
Ag, which is the same today as it was when it was new.Ag represents the Latin name of the element, which is argentum.
The element nickel shares its name with the American or Canadian 5 cent piece. This is because the coin was made out of that metal or its alloy. The element was named in 1751, by Baron Axel Fredrik Cronstedt who first isolated it. In the United States, the term "nickel" was first applied to coins in 1859.
Nickel
The answer of this would have to be nickel. Nickel has an atomic number of 28 and mass number of 58.693g/mol. It is a metal in the D-block of the periodic table (transition metals).
Nickel is an element that has the same name as a US coin worth five cents.
What is a function where each domain element is mapped to the same range element.
An array element has the same type as the array name.
The same, but in an American accent.
Mercury
No: Anions of nonmetals end in the suffix -ide, but no element name ends in this group of letters.
Yes, all atoms with the same number of protons will have the same name. The number of protons in an atomic nucleus is what we use to number the elements. Elements with the same number of protons are the same element, as the identity of an element is due solely to the number of protons in its nucleus.
The element in the same group as lithium (Group 1) and the same period as iron (Period 4) is potassium.
Hydrogen