hydro hands
In the right corner of the periodic table.
Elements in the periodic table that are similar to sulfur would be oxygen, and selenium
It would be the 10th element in the periodic table, Neon.
Element X would most likely be found in the alkali metal group on the far left of the periodic table.
Stop being lazy it would take 2 seconds to look at the periodic table and find out.
In the right corner of the periodic table.
If the xkcd periodic table was used to create a new element, it would likely be a fictional or humorous element, as the xkcd periodic table is not based on scientific accuracy.
Elements in the periodic table that are similar to sulfur would be oxygen, and selenium
If you're asking what element is number 17 on the periodic table the answer is Chlorine. Assuming this is for a chemistry class you should have a periodic table available to you and that would be rather easy to look up.
It would be the 10th element in the periodic table, Neon.
Element X would most likely be found in the alkali metal group on the far left of the periodic table.
CuL2 is not found on the periodic table as a stand-alone element. It likely refers to a compound where Cu represents the element copper and L represents a ligand that is attached to the copper atom. This compound would be a coordination complex, not an individual element on the periodic table.
Yes.
If a new element is added under francium in the periodic table, its atomic number would be 119. Francium has an atomic number of 87, so the next element in the periodic table would be the one with an atomic number of 88, which is radium. The subsequent element would have an atomic number of 119.
The heaviest element in the periodic table (known in March 2013) is ununoctium.
Stop being lazy it would take 2 seconds to look at the periodic table and find out.
The periodic table would be disturbed only if isotopes of a new element are discovered, because a periodic table is based on order of atomic number, not atomic mass. If new isotopes of a previously known element were discovered, the atomic mass shown in the periodic table might be changed, but this is very unlikely because the atomic masses shown in a periodic table are based on the naturally occurring distribution of isotopes, and any newly discovered isotopes would probably occur only in very small fractions of the total.