Caesium (Latin caesius meaning "sky blue") was spectroscopically discovered by Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff in 1860 in mineral water from Durkheim
Bunsen and Kirchhoff discovered the element cesium in 1860 through their spectroscopic studies. They identified it by analyzing the spectrum of mineral water from the Durkheim springs. Cesium is a soft, silvery-gold alkali metal with the atomic number 55.
Caesium chloride has a cubic crystal structure where each caesium ion is surrounded by eight chloride ions and vice versa. This arrangement forms a simple cubic lattice where caesium and chloride ions alternate to balance the charges.
The chemical formula of caesium sulfate is Cs2SO4.
the formula for water is simply H2O (two hydrogens, one oxygen). The formula for cesium is Cs, it is a simple element. If you mean the reaction equation it is 2Cs + 2H2O --> 2CsOH + H2 The products are cesium hydroxide and hydrogen gas.
CsP2, but two is da subscript...........................by Antoine Lewis
Cesium was discovered by Bunsen and Kirchhoff.
Gustav Kirchhoff was the great Prussian scientist who, with Robert Bunsen, invented the spectroscope and used it to discover Caesium and Rubidium.
Yea, Robert Bunsen did discover caesium
a bunsen burner
Caesium was first identified in 1860 by Robert Bunsen (of Bunsen burner fame), and Gustav Kirchhoff (of electrical circuits fame), in the course of studying flame photometry. [This same pair also discovered rubidium.]Caesium was named after the Latin word for blue, its flame colour. This metal melts below body temperature at 28.4oC. It also has some nasty radionuclides.
Robert Bunsen (1811-1899) was a German chemist, discoverer of caesium and rubidium (with Gustav Kirchhoff), is one of the inventors of the Bunsen burner (with Peter Desaga), published many contributions in other chapters of chemistry.
R. Bunsen and G. Kirchhoff discovered rubidium and cesium.
German chemists Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff discovered rubidium in 1861 by the newly developed method of flame spectroscopy Rubidium was discovered in 1861 by German chemists Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff through flame spectroscopy. Flame spectroscopy involve taking the substance to be analzed, coating a wire in it, and holding the wire inside of the flame of a Bunsen Burner (guess who invented this! See above). The color of the flame is then recorded.
Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff were the inventors of the spectroscope.
Robert Bunsen did NOT invent the Bunsen burner. It was his assistant Peter Desaga, who developed it. He discovered two new elements, the metals caesium and rubidium.
The Bunsen burner was invented by Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff in the 1850s. Neither Michael Faraday nor Peter Desdega were involved in the creation of the Bunsen burner.
People do not "invent" naturally occurring elements; they only "discover" them. To discover Rb & Cs, Bunsen & Kirchhoff found the new-fangled spectroscope quite indispensable. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubidium#History http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesium#History