the right side of the table... on the right side of the staircase shaped line. (includes Hydrogen)
it's an element on the Periodic Table; it's just abbreviated here's another example H. bye
Periodic trends illustrate how some elements are very reactive while others are stable.
Short Answer:The creation of the Periodic Table of the Elements is credited to Dmitri Mendeleev.Long Answer:The Periodic Table of the Elements has no one creator. It has ten official contributors and is still being added to today. Here is a list of contributors, date of contribution, and the contribution as best as I can type it in this box.Aristotle -- ~330 BC -- Four element theory: earth, air, fire, and water.Antoine Lavoisier -- ~1770-1789 -- Wrote the first extensive list of elements containing 33 elements. Distinguished between metals and nonmetals.Jöns Jacob Berzelius -- 1828 -- Developed a table of atomic weights. Introduced letters to symbolize elements.Johann Döbereiner -- 1829 -- Developed 'triads', groups of three elements with similar properties.Lithium, sodium, and potassium formed a triad.Calcium, strontium, and barium formed a triad.Chlorine, bromine, and iodine formed a triad.John Newlands -- 1864 -- The known elements (less than 60) were arranged in order of atomic weights and observed similarities between the first and ninth elements, the second and tenth elements etc. He proposed the 'Law of Octaves'.Lothar Meyer -- 1869 -- Compiled a Periodic Table of 56 elements based on the periodicity of properties such as molar volume when arranged in order of atomic weight.Dmitri Mendeleev -- 1869 -- Produced a table based on atomic weights but arranged 'periodically' with elements with similar properties under each other. Gaps were left for elements that were unknown at that time and their predicted properties (the elements were gallium, scandium, and germanium). The order of elements was re-arranged if their properties dictated it, eg, tellerium is heavier than iodine but comes before it in the Periodic Table.William Ramsay -- 1894 -- Discovered the Noble Gases.Henry Moseley -- 1914 -- Determined the atomic number of each of the elements. He modified the 'Periodic Law' to read that the properties of the elements vary periodically with their atomic numbers.Glenn Seaborg -- 1940 -- Synthesised transuranic elements (the elements after uranium in the periodic table).
is what a metal or nonmetal???
The song flopped in the charts.The fish flopped about on the deck.
To the right
metals are on the left nonmetals are on the right and the metalloids are in the middle. Here is a saying to help you remember metals on the left, nonmetals on the right the metalloids keep them from getting in a fight
Metals are located on the left side of the periodic table, predominantly in the groups 1, 2, and 3, as well as in the transition metals in groups 3 to 12. They are characterized by properties such as high electrical conductivity, luster, and malleability.
The main families of the periodic table are the alkali metals, the alkaline earth metals, the halogens, and the noble gasses. see them here to view where they are one the periodic table.. hopefully this answers your question.
The word risky is here inadequate.
Yes there is. In fact, the periodic table was designed by a Russian named Dmitri Mendeleev. If you want a picture, go here: http://flerovlab.jinr.ru/flnr/periodic_table.html
There are more than 100, but a periodic table will serve you well here.
i dont know thats why i came here da
Here you go- follow the link below-
Here are the first 10 elements on the Periodic Table from 1 to 10.HydrogenHeliumLithiumBerylliumBoronCarbonNitrogenOxygenFluorineNeon
None. The periodic table of elements is a convenient way to display all known elements, song with a few fundamental properties of each. No 'laws' are captured here.
Fermium. To find this type of information, you look at a periodic table. You will find a really useful one here: www.rsc.org/periodic-table/?gclid=CjwKEAjw2MOhBRCq-Nr87_j-lDASJAAl4FNhssVbsyCT_UjwmmrpVjUngib6tHybHy88YrC1gH_1shoCZDzw_wcB