The word for sodium in European languages

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The word for sodium in European languages
ZeroHedge - On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero
Ok I hate Gates and Buffett as much as the next guy but this is extremely based.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i8C7YLPClAA
Sodium (Natrium, Na) and Cesium (Caesium, Cs)
Sodium (Natrium, Na) and Cesium (Caesium, Cs)
Sodium!
Another elemental! DESIGN IS PROPERTY OF TUMBLR USER @blasphysics I love her design! It is a amazing!! Her bio: She's a veteran war technician who was forced into battle after her commander was shattered in battle, her leg was cut off. She couldn't regrow it, so a prosthetic was made for her made of paraffin wax, to prohibit it from reacting and destroying her entirely.
commission for @11natrium
His goat with my lil bunny boi Xen
Ask Ethan: What's The Quantum Reason That Sodium And Water React?
“Which forces drive chemical reactions, and what takes place on a quantum level? In particular, what happens when water interacts with sodium?”
Every beginning chemistry student learns what happens when you put a chunk of sodium metal into water: you get an extremely violent reaction out. The sodium and water bubble and fizz, and sometimes even a flame or an outright combustion reaction is produced. This isn’t exclusive to sodium, either, but occurs for lithium, potassium, rubidium, cesium and more. We can describe these chemical reactions using basic chemistry, of course, but there’s a more fundamental reason it occurs: the laws of quantum mechanics. By combining the laws of electromagnetism with the Pauli exclusion principle and the shapes of electron orbitals, we can understand the full step-by-step process by which this occurs. Thanks to these laws, a reaction that had been described for hundreds of years can now finally be fully explained.
What’s the quantum reason sodium and water react? Find out on this edition of Ask Ethan!
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