List of places used in the names of chemical elements
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The names of some terrestrial locations or astronomical objects are used to name the chemical elements. The first table below lists the terrestrial locations and the second table lists astronomical objects which the chemical elements are named after.[1]
Terrestrial locations
Terrestrial locations (Indirect connotation)
Location | Element | Symbol | Z | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Belur, India[2] | Beryllium | Be | 4 | 13°9′46.44″N 75°51′25.56″E / 13.1629000°N 75.8571000°E |
Astronomical objects
Astronomical object | Element | Symbol | Z |
---|---|---|---|
Sun | Helium | He | 2 |
Mercury | Mercury | Hg | 80 |
Moon | Selenium | Se | 34 |
Pallas (asteroid) | Palladium | Pd | 46 |
Earth | Tellurium | Te | 52 |
Ceres (Dwarf planet) | Cerium | Ce | 58 |
Uranus | Uranium | U | 92 |
Neptune | Neptunium | Np | 93 |
Pluto (Dwarf planet) | Plutonium | Pu | 94 |
See also
References
- ↑ Page of Kevin A. Boudreaux and Angelo State university
- ↑ Olivelle, Patrick (2006), Between the Empires, Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE, page 463, Oxford University Press.
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