Science, asked by shrivastavamudit303, 7 months ago

write the chamical symbol of
gold
silver
sodium
nitrogen​

Answers

Answered by anonymousguide
0

Answer:

Au Ag Na N. ..............

Answered by iamkanishshyam
3

Answer:

Elements are pure substances. The atoms of each element are chemically distinct and different from those of any other element. Approximately 110 elements are now known. By 1980, 106 of these had been unequivocally characterized and accepted by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). Since that time, elements 107 and 109 have been identified among the products of a nuclear reaction. The search for new elements continues in many laboratories around the world; new elements may be announced at any time.

A. Names and Symbols of the Elements

Each element has a name. Many of these names are already familiar to you - gold, silver, copper, chlorine, platinum, carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. The names themselves are interesting. Many refer to a property of the element. The Latin name for gold is aurum, meaning "shining dawn." The Latin name for mercury, hydrargyrum, means "liquid silver."

The practice of naming an element after one of its properties continues. Cesium was discovered in 1860 by the German chemist Bunsen (the inventor of the Bunsen burner). Because this element imparts a blue color to a flame, Bunsen named it cesium from the Latin word caesius, meaning "sky blue."

Other elements are named for people. Curium is named for Marie Curie (1867-1934), a pioneer in the study of radioactivity. Marie Curie, a French scientist of Polish birth, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903 for her studies of radioactivity. She was also awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1911 for her discovery of the elements polonium (named after Poland) and radium (Latin, radius, "ray").

Some elements are named for places. The small town of Ytterby in Sweden has four elements named for it: terbium, yttrium, erbium, and ytterbium. Californium is another example of an element named for the place where it was first observed. This element does not occur in nature. It was first produced in 1950 in the Radiation Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, by a team of scientists headed by Glenn Seaborg. Seaborg was also the first to identify curium at the metallurgical laboratory at the University of Chicago (now Argonne National Laboratory) in 1944. Seaborg himself was named a Nobel laureate in 1951 in honor of his pioneering work in the preparation of other unknown elements.

Each element has a symbol,one or two letters that represent the element much as your initials represent you. The symbol of an element represents one atom of that element. For 14 of the elements, the symbol consists of one letter. With the possible exceptions of yttrium (Y) and vanadium (V), you are probably familiar with the names of all elements having one-letter symbols. These elements are listed in Table 3.1. For 12 of these elements, the symbol is the first letter of the name.

Potassium was discovered in 1807 and named for potash, the substance from which potassium was first isolated. Potassium's symbol, K, comes from kalium, the Latin word for potash. Tungsten, discovered in 1783, has the symbol W, for wolframite, the mineral from which tungsten was first isolated.

TABLE 3.1 Elements with one-letter symbols

Symbol Element

B

boron

C

carbon

F

fluorine

H

hydrogen

I

iodine

N

nitrogen

O

oxygen

Symbol Element

P

phosphorus

K

potassium

S

sulfur

W

tungsten

U

uranium

V

vanadium

Y

yttrium

Most other elements have two-letter symbols. In these two-letter symbols, the first letter is always capitalized and the second is always lowercased. Eleven elements have names (and symbols) beginning with the letter C. One of these, carbon, has a one-letter symbol, C. The other ten have two-letter symbols (see Table 3.2).

TABLE 3.2 Elements whose name begins with the letter C

Symbol Element

Cd

cadmium

Ca

calcium

Cf

californium

C

carbon

Ce

cerium

Cs

cesium

Symbol Element

Cl

chlorine

Cr

chromium

Co

cobalt

Cu

copper

Cm

curium

B. Lists of the Elements

While you study chemistry, you will often need a list of the elements. To see a list of the elements click here. The list includes the symbol, the atomic number, and the atomic weight of the element. The significance of atomic numbers and weights will be discussed in Chapter 4. For now it is sufficient to know that each element has a number between 1 and 110 called its atomic number. This number is as unique to the element as its name or symbol.

The second list, called the periodic table, arranges the elements in order of increasing atomic number in rows of varying length. The significance of the length of the row and the relation among elements in the same row or column will be discussed in Chapter 5. The periodic table appears by clicking on the inside of the front cover of this text. Throughout the text we will refer to the periodic table, because it contains an amazing amount of information. For now you need only be aware that elements in the same column have similar properties and that the heavy stair-step line that crosses the table diagonally from boron (B) to astatine (At) separates the metallic elements from the nonmetallic elements.

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