What is this chemical bond called?
CO2
Carbon Dioxide
Can worms foam?
Yes.
What do nuclear fusion reactors run on? What isotopes of each?
Deuterium-Tritium Plasma. Actually these are the names of the isotopes and they are isotopes of hydrogen, specifically Hydrogen-2 (Deuterium), and Hydrogen-3 (Tritium)
Who invented the periodic table of elements?
Dmitri Mendeleev
How much of the universe is tangible matter?
4%. the rest is dark matter and dark energy.
How graphite is bonded.
What are layers?
How much density does a pulsar have?
IDK. Less than ur mom tho.
OHhHHHHHH!!!!! THATS CRAZYYY!!!!!
What common food is radioactive? (Other than Walmart shrimp)
Another useless fun fact: sometimes trucks carrying bananas set off alarms at radioactive test stations.
How many elements are on the Periodic Table?
118, with the first being hydrogen, with a 1 proton and 1 electron, and the last being Oganessian, with 118 protons, 118 electrons, and 176 neutrons.
How much does a average cumulus cloud weigh?
The average cumulus cloud can weigh up to a million pounds, according to the USGS. That’s even heavier than a Boeing 747 jet completely full of cargo and passengers.
What are all the types of chemical bonds?
Ionic bonds, where electrons are transferred between atoms, creating charged ions that attract each other; covalent bonds, where atoms share electrons to achieve a stable configuration; and metallic bonds, characterized by a "sea" of delocalized electrons shared among metal ions
Why does hydrogen peroxide come in brown bottles?
Because they way it is made, when it interacts with light it causes it to decompose and break down, reducing its effectiveness, and eventually it may just become water.
Fun Fact: This is how elephant toothpaste is made, because when it breaks down, it decomposes into oxygen (O2) and water (H2O). So when you mix it with yeast, which has a chemical called Catalase, It causes a catalyst which speeds up the peroxide's reaction.
What is this called, and what does it do?
It is called a Segrè chart, or a N-Z chart. It lists every isotope and it's proton-neutron, as well as it's decay.
What are all the groups on the periodic table?
Alkali Metals (Group 1), Alkaline Earth Metals (Group 2), Transition Metals (Groups 3–12), Pnictogens (Group 15), Chalcogens (Group 16), Halogens (Group 17), and Noble Gases (Group 18).
What life form can eat razor blades, if any?
The human stomach can dissolve razor blades.
What would this be?
H=Hydrogen
O=Oxygen
H3O
Tri-Hydrogen Monoxide
Where did I learn the answer to Radioactivity 100?
Minecraft. With HBM's Nuclear Tech mod
What element and isotope is commonly used in nuclear reactors?
Uranium-235
What is the symbol for Astatine
AT
What can be made into vanilla flavoring, other than the plant?
Plastic.
No, I'm not kidding. Plastic.
What is this the chemical formula of and how do you say it?
C169723H270464N45688O52243S912
Name: titin
How to say the formula: Its too long to put in here so here is it: https://r.mtdv.me/articles/titinnamelink
Explain β⁻, β⁺, γ, α, neutron emission, proton emission, and fission decay.
β⁻ decay is when neutron converts to a proton, emitting an electron.
β⁺ decay is when a proton converts to a neutron, emitting a positron (antimatter).
γ (gamma) decay is when a isotope decays and emits high-energy photons (gamma rays)
α (alpha) decay is where a nucleus emits a helium nucleus
Fission decay is when an atom splits (how most nuclear energy works)
Neutron and proton decay ejects a neutron or proton respectively to make it more stable.
How do the elements on the periodic table relate?
By increasing atomic number (protons) and by similar valence electron configurations
What can humans produce, other than, uhmmmmm... discards?
Light and venom.
the human body can produce a small amount of light, to faint to be detected by the human eye.
And also venom. How? IDK ask a snake.