Science, asked by mayekarakansha, 3 days ago

Whydid Newlands name the law as
law of octates ?​

Answers

Answered by hariprasadsahu1979
0

Answer:

John Newlands, in full John Alexander Reina Newlands, (born November 26, 1837, London, England—died July 29, 1898, London), English chemist whose “law of octaves” noted a pattern in the atomic structure of elements with similar chemical properties and contributed in a significant way to the development of the periodic ...

Explanation:

Law of octaves, in chemistry, the generalization made by the English chemist J.A.R. Newlands in 1865 that, if the chemical elements are arranged according to increasing atomic weight, those with similar physical and chemical properties occur after each interval of seven elements.

Answered by divyanshtech2006
0

Answer:

An English scientist called John Newlands put forward his Law of Octaves in 1864. He arranged all the elements known at the time into a table in order of relative atomic mass. When he did this, he found a pattern among the early elements. He then put the similar elements into vertical columns, known as groups.

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