06 JUN 2012 by ideonexus

 On the Future of Chemistry

Chemistry is not the preservation hall of old jazz that it sometimes looks like. We cannot know what may happen tomorrow. Someone may oxidize mercury (II), francium (I), or radium (II). A mineral in Nova Scotia may contain an unsaturated quark per 1020 nucleons. (This is still 6000 per gram.) We may pick up an extraterrestrial edition of Chemical Abstracts. The universe may be a 4-dimensional soap bubble in an 11-dimensional space as some supersymmetry theorists argued in May of 1983. Who kno...
Folksonomies: chemistry
Folksonomies: chemistry
  1  notes

The science has a nebulous future to predict owing to the engineering and experimental nature of its character.

18 MAR 2012 by ideonexus

 Radioactive Elements "Descend" from One Another

Thus the radio elements formed strange and cruel families in which each member was created by spontaneous transformation of the mother substance: radium was a “descendant” of uranium, polonium a descendant of radium.
Folksonomies: chemistry
Folksonomies: chemistry
  1  notes

Creating "families".