Question:

Is Einsteinium a liquid solid or gas at room temperature??!?

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Im confused =/

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5 ANSWERS


  1. i guess it depends on the tempurature of the room


  2. The only Einsteinium ever produces was a few atoms in a cyclotron and it decays instantly but it can be predicted o be a solid based on it's position in he periodic table.

  3. It's a solid at room temperature, and is actually silver colored.

  4. I don't think it has ever been at room temp. I think that it is lab created which means that there was alot of energy so probably a lot of heat which means it never has been at room temp.

  5. It is a synthetic element. A metal. It's nucleus is greater than uranium.

    At room temperatures it will not last longer than a split second which would also be the case at many degrees below zero, Even absolute zero degrees Kelvin. It simply breaks down into simpler elements by atomic decay. Great energy is released, but we are only dealing with the odd atom, not a kilogram weight which is the core of a nuclear bomb, which would contain 23 x 10*25 atoms of uranium, a very large number. In words, one hundred thousand billion billion atoms. Billion

    billion, is right, that is not a doubling. One atom is a lot less.

    Now, don't you think that that is interesting? I sure do.

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