Added: 3 years ago
From: SMUPhysics
Views: 11,735
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  • @mynameisradar: Mercury is a possibility, but I doubt it, the spectrum just doesn't seem to match, and mercury's glow is usually more blue-green.

    It's certainly not Neon. Neon has a whole bunch of lines toward the red end of the spectrum. Good tries though.

    It may be helium, though I thought helium's red lines were dimmer than the video shows.

    It also may be sulfur, its spectral lines seem to be in almost the right places.

  • there could have been more elements or compounds spectrum's in this video not necessarily all of them but the ones we mostly use in our society. like sodium, neon, mercury, co2, argon, helium, xenon , and maybe lithium. i would like to see there spectrum's as well as other elements or compounds that is used to emit light

  • I think something is wrong with your hydrogen tube.

    I'm not sure why there's a yellow line and two red lines.

  • @indigofuzzy it's probably neon or mercury

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