i jets hate chemistery and its so weard we dont need chemistery for nothing if your not going to be a science related.....
The mean concentration of mercury in the litosphere is 0,05 ppm.
For a compound to be organic, it must have both carbon and hydrogen. Carbon in its elemental form is therefore inorganic. A carbon pool or stock or reservoir is simply a storage mechanism by which the Earth stores carbon.
Mercury was the messenger-god of Jupiter, and was the god of games, of business, and of story telling. He was the offspring of the god Jupiter and Maia. Maia herself was and one of the Pleiades, daughters of the titan Atlas. Mercury was identified with the Greek god Hermes.
Scientists thought it was gray, until MESSENGER found red and green stains as it flew by.
'si' does stand for any chemical element!!!!! If you mean 'Si', then it is silicon. NB For single letter elemental symbols are ALWAYS a CAPITAL letter. For two letter elemental symbols, the first letter is always a capital letter amd the second letter is small /lower case. This is the International IUPAC standard, and as found in the Periodic Table. Hence, silicon is 'Si' , not 'si'
If you mean a naturally occurring element, yes. However it is reactive and therefore not usually found in the pure metal form, instead it is found in compounds as ore.
Two elements that commonly occur in nature as liquids are mercury and bromine. Mercury is a naturally occurring liquid metal, while bromine is a non-metallic element that exists as a liquid at room temperature.
This refers to the diatomic elemental form of nitrogen, N2. It makes up 75% of the atmosphere.
If by elemental, you mean "fundamental", that's spelled (in roomaji): kihonteki.If by elemental, you mean "relating to the elements," that's spelled (in katakana): エレメンタル。
If you mean the element Phosphorus ( P ), no.Phosphorus is a solid that fuses at around 44o C and boils atabout 287o C.
760 mm Hg is the standard barometric (atmospheric) pressure. It is the pressure giving a pillar of mercury (the elemental abbreviation of mercury is Hg) that is 760 millimeters (mm) high.
The intertwined A and W form the monogram of the coin's designer, A. A. Weinman.
If you mean hydrogen in elemental form, it's darn near zero.
The Babylonians, who were credited with writing about both the element and the planet about 3500BC but this does not mean they were the first to observe.
If you mean react with, the answer is a lot. Lithium is one of the most reactive elements there is. To start with, it reacts violently to fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine, the Halogens. It also reacts with hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon, hence why it's never found in nature in its elemental form. Its other major elemental reaction is with sulfur. Not surprisingly, there are a vast amount of compounds it also reacts with.
The two most commonly found liquids in liquid-in-glass thermometers are mercury and alcohol. Mercury thermometers are used for high-temperature applications, while alcohol thermometers are used for lower temperatures due to their lower toxicity.
If you mean something such as "pure flourine" it is referring to it's "elemental state" F2 in Flourine's case. If you mean something such as "pure flourine" it is referring to it's "elemental state" F2 in Flourine's case.