Niobium (# 41) after Niobe, daughter of Tantalus.
From Niobe - daughter of Tantalus, goddess of the tears in the Greek mythology.
you find it in CANAD BoMD or Brazil and it's extracted from tantalum. it's called niobium because it was once confused with tantalum which is named after tantalus in greek mythology and niobe, tantalus's daughter. That is the reason it is called BOMB. Do you understand my friend.
The element named for a Cajun country is Americium, which is named after the United States of America.
The element Uranium was named after Uranus.
The element europium is named after the continent Europe.
Niobium is named after Niobe, a figure in Greek mythology who was the daughter of Tantalus. The element was originally named Columbium, but in the 19th century, it was renamed Niobium to avoid confusion with the element columbium, which is now known as tantalum.
From Niobe - daughter of Tantalus, goddess of the tears in the Greek mythology.
Tantalum, named after the character "Tantalus", from Greek Mythology. Tantalum's atomic number is 73.
The daughter was Niobe
Niobe
you find it in CANAD BoMD or Brazil and it's extracted from tantalum. it's called niobium because it was once confused with tantalum which is named after tantalus in greek mythology and niobe, tantalus's daughter. That is the reason it is called BOMB. Do you understand my friend.
Niobē.
Tantalus did it to his son.
The identity of his wife is variously given: Dione; or Eurythemista, a daughter of the river-god Xanthus; or Euryanassa, daughter of Pactolus, another river-god, or Clytia, the child of Amphidamantes.
The moral is that when you become to selfish, it affects more people than just you. After Tantalus died his evilness had been passed down to his daughter and then to her kids and their kids.
The chemical element tantalum is named after the mythological (Greek Mythology) Tantalus because of its lack of reactivity. As an aside it is also extremely corrosion resistant. Tantalum was named after Tantalus, due to the metal's inability to absorb acids. Tantalus was a king in Greek mythology who, as punishment for his crimes, had to stand in water which receded each time he stooped to drink it, overhung by grapes that drew back when he tried to reach them. His name is also the root of the verb "tantalize".
The element with a Swedish name is "tantal" (tantalum), which is derived from the mythological figure Tantalus. The name reflects the element's inability to be dissolved in acid, much like Tantalus's eternal longing for unattainable sustenance. Tantalum is used in electronic components, particularly in capacitors and high-power resistors.