No. Cesium is a very soft metal with a low melting temperature.
The high reactivity of cesium comes from its tendency to give up the one electron in its outermost shell and become a cesium 1+ ion, which is more stable. In cesium chloride, the cesium is already in its stable ionic form.
Cesium thiocyanate
"Powering Innovation with Cesium - The Element of Possibilities."
Cesium bicarbonate would be CsHCO3
Cesium was discovered in Germany by Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff in 1860.
The compound formed between sulfur and cesium is called cesium sulfide.
Because the atom of francium is a whole row down from cesium. You see more YouTube videos of cesium in water because francium is highly radioactive, so it would be very hard to obtain a sample of francium to throw into water.
cesium phosphide
Cesium Nitride
The cesium ion is called cesium ion or Cs+.
The correct name for the cesium ion is "cesium ion" or "Cs+ ion".
Cesium Chromate = Cs2CrO4
cesium will sink
The formula for Cesium Peroxide is: Cs2O2
When cesium and fluorine react, they form the ionic compound cesium fluoride (CsF).
The high reactivity of cesium comes from its tendency to give up the one electron in its outermost shell and become a cesium 1+ ion, which is more stable. In cesium chloride, the cesium is already in its stable ionic form.
They form cesium sulfide, and the formula is Ce2S.