The fermium oxide is not known; the possible formula is Fm2O3.
The common name for silver oxide is simply silver(I) oxide.
Fermium is a synthetic element that is not found in nature and is produced in very small quantities. As a result, fermium is extremely expensive to produce, with estimated costs ranging from tens of thousands to millions of dollars per gram. Therefore, it is difficult to provide an exact cost per pound for fermium due to its rarity and the specialized processes required for its production.
The formula for the oxide ion is O2-, and the formula for the nitrate ion is NO3-.
Fermium is obtained only in quantities of some micrograms; fermium is not a product for sale.
The most common iron oxide is iron(III) oxide, also known as ferric oxide or rust. It is a reddish-brown compound that forms when iron reacts with oxygen in the presence of water.
The oxide of fermium is not known.
The only common thorium oxide formula is ThO2.
See the list of fermium isotopes at the link below.
This compound was not prepared; formulas will be Fm(OH)2 and Fm(OH)3.
Three oxides of plutonium are known: PuO, PuO2, Pu2O3.
The most common oxidation numbers of fermium, Fm, are +2 and +3, though there are no stable isotopes (half-life times shorter than 100 days)
Stable oxides: UO2, U3O8, UO3 Unstable oxides: U2O5, U4O9, U3O7, UO Note that from the oxide UO2,000 to the oxide UO3,000 is practically a continuous variation of the ratio oxygen/uranium.
Iron (III) oxide, Fe2O3, is rust, which is a solid.
Fermium is very radioactive; ingestion or inhalation of fermium are dangerous.
Magnesium Oxide
Fermium has not uses.
Fermium is not famous.