A list of puns related to "Atomic Number 98"
When you look at historical events, there were large international wars WAY more frequent prior to the first Atomic bomb. Aside from Vietnam and the Gulf War (and definitely not trying to minimize these), the frequency of large international conflicts have actually decreased significantly in number. Hell, there were two catastrophic world wars within 3 decades during the early to mid 1900βs. Nothing of that magnitude has occurred in over 80 years.
https://preview.redd.it/yzcw9m8n6qu71.png?width=920&format=png&auto=webp&s=8c5173a5349913a36cb1c3c20e7238ad88ad8f45
Earn five points per question - up to 50 points total - when you answer correctly.
NOTE: Please, check both options available to you on the list and then select the correct answer based on the question.
List ordered in Alphabetical order A, B, C.
List ordered from Lowest to Highest 1, 2, 3.
It is the same as the one posted on 10-01-2020
i just needed to share. iβm new, and like probably most i was wondering about the commonly tipped 1.9 or 0.19 ban.
so in my head i pre formulated a post, which went something along those lines
βwhy is everyone tipping weird amounts of ban? like, i know itβs probably because of the kalium, but for real- why?β
then i remembered to utse. and found out itβs actually because of the kalium. in the best way possible.
and i canβt stop grinning since.
this is the best community ever! so glad i found my way here. you people filled my heart with so much childish joy, i canβt even.
thank you! have a happy new year!
The question is: is there a clear physical limit to the atomic number of an element or, theoretically, the atomic number can go up indefinitely? Yes I know that common sense will tell that no, it cannot go up indefinitely, but what's the physical law that prevent it, and why?
https://www.reddit.com/r/MicrosoftRewards/comments/qcj25r/us_this_or_that_which_has_the_lower_atomic_number/?utm_medium=android_app&utm_source=share
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