The Race to Invent the Periodic Table
Featured
Thanks! Share it with your friends!
URL
Sorry, only registred users can create playlists.
Description
This week on Reactions, we look at the chemistry of gallium, the science behind the holes in the periodic table, and the history of how the elements fell into place.
Some chemists might see the periodic table of elements as a holy testament to the power of science. However, when it first debuted, it was a different kind of holey, and its journey to classroom walls everywhere had a whole lot of bumps. Watch as Reactions digs into the history of the periodic table with the help of a vanishing spoon, a man named after a rooster, and a bearded Russian.
Find us on all these places:
Subscribe! http://bit.ly/ACSReactions
Facebook! http://facebook.com/ACSReactions
Twitter! http://twitter.com/ACSReactions
Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/acsreactions/
Tumblr! http://acsreactions.tumblr.com/
Narrator:
Alexa Billow
Executive Producer:
Elaine Seward
Producer:
Sean Parsons
Fact Checker:
Kyle Nackers
Scientific Consultant:
Sam Kean
Writer/Scientific Consultant:
Darcy Gentleman, Ph.D.
Sources:
Kean, Sam. The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements. Random House, 2011. 54-56
Bunsen & Kirchhoff - analytical spectroscopy
Chemistry in its Element Podcast, Royal Society of Chemistry
Crisp, D., A. Pathare, and R. C. Ewell. "The performance of gallium arsenide/germanium solar cells at the Martian surface." Acta Astronautica 54.2 (2004): 83-101.)
Atkins, P.W. The periodic kingdom. Basic Books, 1997
CRC Handbook of Chemistry & Physics (88th Ed.)
Ever wonder why dogs sniff each others' butts? Or how Adderall works? Or whether it's OK to pee in the pool? We've got you covered: Reactions a web series about the chemistry that surrounds you every day.
Reactions is produced by the American Chemical Society.
Some chemists might see the periodic table of elements as a holy testament to the power of science. However, when it first debuted, it was a different kind of holey, and its journey to classroom walls everywhere had a whole lot of bumps. Watch as Reactions digs into the history of the periodic table with the help of a vanishing spoon, a man named after a rooster, and a bearded Russian.
Find us on all these places:
Subscribe! http://bit.ly/ACSReactions
Facebook! http://facebook.com/ACSReactions
Twitter! http://twitter.com/ACSReactions
Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/acsreactions/
Tumblr! http://acsreactions.tumblr.com/
Narrator:
Alexa Billow
Executive Producer:
Elaine Seward
Producer:
Sean Parsons
Fact Checker:
Kyle Nackers
Scientific Consultant:
Sam Kean
Writer/Scientific Consultant:
Darcy Gentleman, Ph.D.
Sources:
Kean, Sam. The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements. Random House, 2011. 54-56
Bunsen & Kirchhoff - analytical spectroscopy
Chemistry in its Element Podcast, Royal Society of Chemistry
Crisp, D., A. Pathare, and R. C. Ewell. "The performance of gallium arsenide/germanium solar cells at the Martian surface." Acta Astronautica 54.2 (2004): 83-101.)
Atkins, P.W. The periodic kingdom. Basic Books, 1997
CRC Handbook of Chemistry & Physics (88th Ed.)
Ever wonder why dogs sniff each others' butts? Or how Adderall works? Or whether it's OK to pee in the pool? We've got you covered: Reactions a web series about the chemistry that surrounds you every day.
Reactions is produced by the American Chemical Society.
Post your comment
Comments
Be the first to comment