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Post by midgetmogget on Nov 25, 2005 13:32:07 GMT
I apologise. What is the most common element in the universe?
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Post by lotsahillsv13 on Nov 25, 2005 17:03:10 GMT
Hydrogen, I believe. That's what all the stars are made of.
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Post by CRG on Nov 25, 2005 17:42:40 GMT
And what is the least common element?
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Post by bubble on Nov 25, 2005 20:45:12 GMT
There we go, I've tidied it a bit. The least common element has got to be one of those that is created inlabs, is highly unstable, and only tiny amounts can be formed,. I think the 4th most common element is Sodium (how useful for you all to know)
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Post by CRG on Nov 25, 2005 21:08:50 GMT
Ok, so what's the least common naturally occuring non-lab formated element?
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Post by lotsahillsv13 on Nov 26, 2005 18:31:05 GMT
Astatine, I think.
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Post by midgetmogget on Nov 28, 2005 14:30:29 GMT
Or is that just on earth?
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Post by lotsahillsv13 on Nov 28, 2005 18:46:30 GMT
I can't imagine there's much anywhere else.
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Post by CRG on Nov 28, 2005 20:21:17 GMT
Space is mostly empty-lack-of-anything-and-therefore-elements-ness. Apart from an infinite amount of balls of gas and rock.
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Post by StephiB on Nov 28, 2005 21:23:23 GMT
And dark matter.
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Post by midgetmogget on Nov 29, 2005 10:59:06 GMT
Yes, but the gas and rock contain elements..
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Post by bubble on Dec 2, 2005 21:00:42 GMT
and so does the dark matter doesn't it???
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Post by lotsahillsv13 on Dec 4, 2005 9:34:56 GMT
I don't think the scientists know much about dark matter. They know it exists, and that's about it.
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Post by CRG on Dec 4, 2005 11:05:41 GMT
So they don't know why it's there, what it does...? Cool.
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Post by bubble on Dec 4, 2005 13:49:27 GMT
That's what we need to discover to win a noble prize
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