the periodic table and the cosmos

DonDiego

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So I was taking to someone and come to find out. The things that planets in our solar system are mostly made of or consist with is on our periodic table of elements. Like the moon consist of molybdenum that is Mo on the table. Pluto consist mostly of plutonium.

Now this how did they know this prior to visiting the moon or Pluto. Ancient Knoelegde it's been known they just present it to us as new info.
:mindblown:

The sun ancient name is Helios the sun is made mostly of Helium. How the fukk did they know these elements before going there. And correlate it with the planets. shyt is fukking me up
 

jdubnyce

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So I was taking to someone and come to find out. The things that planets in our solar system are mostly made of or consist with is on our periodic table of elements. Like the moon consist of molybdenum that is Mo on the table. Pluto consist mostly of plutonium.

Now this how did they know this prior to visiting the moon or Pluto. Ancient Knoelegde it's been known they just present it to us as new info.
:mindblown:

The sun ancient name is Helios the sun is made mostly of Helium. How the fukk did they know these elements before going there. And correlate it with the planets. shyt is fukking me up
:dajackie:
 

Ms.CuriousCat

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:leon:

helium (n.)


1868, coined from Greek helios "sun" (from PIE root *sawel- "the sun"), because the element was detected in the solar spectrum during the eclipse of Aug. 18, 1868, by English astronomer Sir Joseph N. Lockyer (1836-1920) and English chemist Sir Edward Frankland (1825-1899). It was not actually obtained until 1895; before then it was assumed to be an alkali metal, hence the ending in -ium.

But :aicmon:

Plutonium was named after the planet, Pluto. This is because it came after Uranium, which was named after the planet Uranus, and neptunium, which was named after the planet Neptune.

http://www.livescience.com/39871-facts-about-plutonium.html
 

DonDiego

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:leon:

helium (n.)


1868, coined from Greek helios "sun" (from PIE root *sawel- "the sun"), because the element was detected in the solar spectrum during the eclipse of Aug. 18, 1868, by English astronomer Sir Joseph N. Lockyer (1836-1920) and English chemist Sir Edward Frankland (1825-1899). It was not actually obtained until 1895; before then it was assumed to be an alkali metal, hence the ending in -ium.

But :aicmon:

Plutonium was named after the planet, Pluto. This is because it came after Uranium, which was named after the planet Uranus, and neptunium, which was named after the planet Neptune.

http://www.livescience.com/39871-facts-about-plutonium.html

The thing is that the planets contain or is made mostly of the same matter we have it abbreviated as on the table.

1984LPICo.540...13N Page 13

That silvery dust that we see on the moon molybdenum.

Apollo moon landing 1969
https://www.google.com/search?q=first+moon+landing&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-b

They say a man in 1868 recoded sun elements from a solar eclipse. That technology and time frame doesn't match up
 
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