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Argon

By: Pili

Prez

Day 1:
My baby is named him Argon, but I call him Ar.
The origin of the name is Greek meaning inactive/
lazy. Argon was born in Scotland in 1894
delivered by the doctors William Ramsey and
Baron Rayleigh. Its BMI when born was 0.0018 (g/
cm3),and its measurements were: weight 39.948
amu, length 71 pm, and height 18. Its gender is
gas, with a colorless physical appearance, and a
-185.7C (boiling) and -189.2C (melting) personality.
2

Name of baby:
Birth date:
Place of birth:

Argon
1894

http://sp.depositphotos.com/34733345/stock-illustrationscotland-flag-vector-illustration.html

BIRTH CERTIFICATE

Scotland

Name of siblings: 36Ar


38Ar
40Ar

http://www.chemicool.com/elements/argon.html

Argons portrait

Atomic number: 18
Protons: 18
Electrons: 18
Neutrons: 22

Family name: Noble Gases


Family members: Helium,
Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon,
and Radon

http://noblegaslab.coas.oregonstate.edu/

http://sciencewithme.com/learn-about-noble-gases/

http://imgkid.com/large-family-clipart.shtml

Family

Argon will do gas tungsten


and gas metal arc welding,
manufacture titanium, steel,
and aluminum, grow silicon
crystals, laser in eye surgery,
and fill incandescent and
fluorescent bulbs.

Laser

http://pss.scdsb.on.ca/Departments/Science/
SCH4U/Zac%20and%20Ben/Html's%20incase
%20site%20doesn't%20upload/
careersandapplications.html

Gas welding
http://periodictable.com/
Items/018.1/index.html

http://
www.boyssmithvision.co
m/technology.php

http://learningfuze.com/blog/
what-you-will-gethave-whenyou-graduate-our-program/

Argons Future

Light bulb filled with Argon

Adoption process

welding
growing crystals
light bulbs
vacuum tubes.

http://www.chem4kids.com/files/elements/018_speak.html

Argon is found in the Earths crust and oceans


water. It is the most abundant of the noble gases in
the earths atmosphere .

Bibliography
!
!
http://www.rsc.org/periodic-table/element/18/argon!
http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/ar.html!
http://www.eoearth.org/view/article/150229/!
http://www.chem4kids.com/files/elem_noblegas.html!
http://www.ehow.com/list_6105110_five-major-uses-argon.html!
http://www.chemistryexplained.com/elements/A-C/Argon.html

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