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Science

Not Your Father's Periodic Table 28

grahamkg writes "Science Daily has an article about a new periodic table of elements oriented toward cosmology. A PDF of the actual table can be found here."
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Not Your Father's Periodic Table

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  • by Asprin ( 545477 ) <(gsarnold) (at) (yahoo.com)> on Saturday October 18, 2003 @12:16AM (#7246800) Homepage Journal

    The astronomer's periodic table:

    1 Hydrogen
    2 Helium
    Metals

  • It's the same periodic table, they just put weird numbers on it. All the symbols are the same and are in the right spot.
    • Wow, did you come up with that yourself? Of course they are the same elements, but the information presented is different because it is intended for use by astronomers and cosmologists rather than terrestrial chemists.
      • I think the point was that with a headline like "Not Your Father's Periodic Table" we (I, at least) expected to click on a link and see something earth shatteringly novel, unique, and different... Instead it's the same chart, with the same format, in the same shape, with the elements in the same order. Only instead of atomic number it's got abundancy and condensation temperature. Whohoo. Oh, and instead of being colored by solid/liquid/gas, it's something different. I'm sure this is interesting to cosm
  • I find it striking. So mathematical. So precise. So practical! I love it.

    And yet....hmmmm. The colors. They're--how do you say--so Mondrian, so Vegas. The neon yellows and the puke green--they just don't do it for me.

    It would be better with a pastel yellow, and a softer green, like a seagreen. As for the grey background. . . . Uck! That has to go. You can always use eggshell white.

    All in all, I'd give it an A for originality, but only a B- for aesthetic value.

    Advice to the artist: just improve your

  • Periodic Table of the Elements [bbc.co.uk]

    and in case you'd not noticed the URL, it's a comedy show [bbc.co.uk] (just imagine a parody of the Open University, or all those 'Science' shows you had to watch at school when you were a kid that patronised you and told you utter rubbish). Hilarious, and now out on Dependable Video Discus [bbc.co.uk].

    Mark
  • Egon Ronay has released a new gastronomic periodic table, with the elements arranged by taste. Along the bottom are the tasteless ones such as the inert metals, and higher up are more astringent ones such as iodine and sulphur. Egon has yet to place fluorine and potassium, but is said to be recovering well, according to his wife who visits him daily.
  • by G4from128k ( 686170 ) on Saturday October 18, 2003 @10:22AM (#7248307)
    Although very interesting, this color-coded table does not speak to the cosmological origins of each elemental species. For a truer cosmological table I would expect a more radical rearrangement of the table into a tree or mesh based on the fusion and other nuclear reactions that spawn the elements from the primordial mix of the early universe.

    Elements lighter than iron would probably sit on a nice tree associated with the hydrogen, helium, carbon, etc. fusion cycles. Heavier stuff would be in some type of mesh of fusion and decay reactions that occur in supernovae.

    Such a cosmological orgins table might get a bit messy as each different isotope might be the product of multiple reaction/decay pathways. Maybe a 3-D visualization tool could help present the data in all its glory.
    • Well, maybe I shouldn't say "prefer."
      But I think the Periodic Table and
      the Table of Nuclides should be combined.
      I found another version here [bnl.gov].
      I think the shape of the table is very interesting.
  • by Squiffy ( 242681 ) on Saturday October 18, 2003 @10:40PM (#7251745) Homepage
    I think my father would recognize that table.

    I prefer this one [maricopa.edu].

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