English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

whats so special about it and why is it the only one of its group on the new periodic table in aspidium.

2007-03-07 20:53:21 · 2 answers · asked by Aaron S 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

oh and is anyone else 13 on this just thought i shouldn't waste points. though i don't get why they're so fancy.

2007-03-07 20:56:39 · update #1

if u know could u tell me the source where you got it from.

2007-03-07 22:35:11 · update #2

why doesn't anyone know come on there has to be some nuclear chestrists on yahoo.

2007-03-08 22:44:18 · update #3

2 answers

The periodic table at http://www.apsidium.com/ is an 'extended periodic table of undiscovered elements. Most periodic tables only include elements with atomic numbers up to about 110. All elements with atomic numbers greater than 94 are synthetic elements, meaning that they are not found in nature, but can be created (usually in particle accelerators). Most of the synthetic elements only exist momentarily before decaying (sometimes for just a fraction of a second). As more advanced particle accelerators are built, higher elements are discovered. In 2006, number 118 was discovered. I think the one you're talking about is number 369, so this is basically an element that doesn't exist yet, but might some day be discovered in the future.

2007-03-15 18:21:43 · answer #1 · answered by Brent 2 · 0 0

You realize this is a made up element? There is no such element. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periodic_table

Oh, I checked out the aspidium link. So now let me give you, yet again, the only relevant detail on the element trehexenium: it does not exist.

I'm sure if you post a question in the theology section they can tell you all about it, but scientists deal with reality.

2007-03-10 11:32:48 · answer #2 · answered by Some Body 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers