Quizzes & Puzzles23 mins ago
Only letter not on peridoic table of elements
I was doing some revision, and whilst looking on a periodic table of elements i realised that there is no j on the p.t.o.e. I am i right or did i miss something, i'm sure i checked the lanthanoids and actinoids aswell, am i correct, and is there another letter that doesn't appear on the table?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Furthermore, in the event of the adopted IUPAC name and symbol for 114 Uuq not containing Q, and the IUPAC name and symbol for 113 Uut (Ununtrium) becoming Japonium (Jp), the disappearance of Q and appearance of J would require a quiz question rewrite.
This is, of course, ignoring any effects of the naming of Uup, Uuh, Uus & Uuo (synthetic elements 115 to 118) and any other future synthesised elements .
This is, of course, ignoring any effects of the naming of Uup, Uuh, Uus & Uuo (synthetic elements 115 to 118) and any other future synthesised elements .
@mollykins - "did they jsut forget about j, or is there lots of languages that use latin characters, that don't have a j, so it would confuse them?"
Perhaps they thought that, what with j already being the mysterious square root of -1 and the basis of the entire complex number system, it already had enough on its plate.
Perhaps they thought that, what with j already being the mysterious square root of -1 and the basis of the entire complex number system, it already had enough on its plate.
Ah, but 'j' isnt really the square root of -1, 'i' is. Its only 'j' because the symbol i was already in use in electronics (for current) that 'j' was substituted in, in that particular arena to avoid confusion.
Also we know that any number has 2 square roots, e.g. 4's are 2 and -2. so what is the other square root of -1?
Also we know that any number has 2 square roots, e.g. 4's are 2 and -2. so what is the other square root of -1?
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