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From: periodicvideos
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  • Rwar.

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  • That's all you can tell us about krypton?

  • @Accisma you just ruined the fun for everybody :(

  • am buying KrF laz0r to instagib faggots around the world, send requests at instagibfagDOTcom

  • IMA FIRIN MAH KRYPRON PHOTONS!!

  • Really useful, thanks:)

  • Sounds like Goldfinger's laser..."It can project a spot on the moon..or at closer range, cut through solid metal, I will show you..."

  • that must have been one epic laser

  • I want to see the experiment 

  • 5 people were superman

  • @twizy123 HOW THE HELL SOMEONE HAS A HAIR LIKE THAT? HE MUST BE FROM KRYPTON LAND! HAHHAHAHA

  • @butanuku he is THE fucking stereotypical mad scientist from cartoons haha

  • @twizy123 priceless

  • this might be inappropriate but if i was him i would do something about that afro!

  • dude nice fucking flow im with you who ever it is fuck justin bebier flow buts out this guys lettus

  • krypton is also use mixed with oxygen in welding industry because it work nice and easy .. metal get there melting point faster and keep it more stable ....

  • nice afro dude looking hot how did u get that flow?????

  • did anyone think of SUPERMAN?

  • so dat's wat superman made of. LMAO!!!! :P

  • every one here who is watching this is a nerd that means me too because i love science and i am proud to be a nerd

  • ima get me one of those

  • LOL. The Professor bought a krypton laser that fires 'pretty much' the same way Superman's laser fires. And guess what? It burnt a hole through the wall.

  • i bet you that Einstien guy knows how to make a nuclear Bomb that could blow up Earth =\

  • @pokemaster1234567899 i have 104 reasons to contradict you

  • @pokemaster1234567899 You don't need to be much of a smartass to know how to make a nuclear bomb. The hard part is getting the parts, like the radioactive uranium.

  • but cant that be found in the magma of the earth or near it plus not only that but you need and certain type of reaction on it just like krpton and flurun

  • @Acrbeast44 Oh yeah, silly me. So i'll just go into a 1,160 degrees Celsius volcano and crab some uranium and make a nuclear bomb.

  • @pokemaster1234567899 nukes aren't that complex. the hard part is getting the materials to build one

  • @uut0 Well, the concept may not be complex, but the exacting tolerances aren't something I'd call simple.

  • @wrnchhead76 true and to get the reaciton going it has to be right to fractions of a second. it also must have the right strength(the 1st explosives to trigger the chain reaction) to get it going :O.

  • HHAHAHAHAHAH NICE HAIR!!!

  • KRYPTONITE

  • he said it is not reaction it is reactive it reacts with superman

  • thats krptoNITE or however u spell itt (:

  • @Superboyman101 Is kryptonite an oxide of krypton? How would *that* be made?

  • Wouldn't that be called Kryptonic oxide ?

  • Pretty sure the ending -ite means it is bonded with oxygen. Hence sulphite or nitrite

  • isn't that -ate?

  • @RandomDota krypton oxide, Ic suffix usually means an acid

  • @Roxy222uk If krypton was reactive, then kryptonite would be an oxyanion of krypton. Of course it's impossible because krypton is a noble gas, but if we imagine that the laws of nature were different and krypton was in group VII (=as reactive as chlorine and bromine in the real world), we would have oxyanions called hypokryptonite (KrO-), kryptonite (KrO2-), kryptonate (KrO3-) and perkryptonate (KrO4-).

  • omg superman is in danger? o-o

  • i thought this was about kryptonite but i love this video anyways, and i wanna see that laser tooo

  • oh no save superman

  • how does kypton react? it has a full valence shell...

    unless.....polyatomic ion?

  • He said it reacts with flourine. I think flourine is the most reactive element though.

  • no, actually, fluorine is not very reactive, it is almost full, as it has 7 valance electrons, some reactive elements would be pottasium, hydrogen, and lithium

  • It is because it is only missing one electron that it is the most reactive. It easily accepts electrons because it only needs one. education. jlab. org/itselemental/ele009 .html

    Go here but take out the spaces and it explains why it is the most reactive.

  • If I remember correctly, fluorine is the most electronegative element on the periodic table. Out of all the halogens, (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine, etc.) it is the most reactive because it is a smaller atom and has less space for its negative charge to spread around.

  • Fluorine is the most reactive non-metal. It can easily accept a valence electron from a cation.

  • Fluorine is THE MOST reactive element.

    Its discovery was hindered because once liberated from compound to elemental form, it either blinded or killed the researcher. These individuals are known as "fluorine martyrs."

    So yeah. It's reactive.

  • @pyropakman its not that reactive

  • I was referencing Fluorine, not Krypton.

  • @pyropakman yeah i am referencing flourine. it doent react as much compared to most alkali metals

  • @BowlingFreak218 .... fluorine is the most reactive element...

  • @KnexGod03 wtf r u stupid? fluorine doesn't react whatsoever that's why they put it light bulbs. dumbass

  • @BowlingFreak218 Ok, look. They put argon in lightbulbs, and youre confusing fluorine with a noble gas. Fluorine is in group 7, the halogens. It is the most reactive as it has an incomplete shell, of only 7 electrons. Therefore it rips electrons away from other atoms = Its amazingly reactive.

  • @KnexGod03 what the fuck are you stupid or something? argon has 8 electrons in the orbit which when there are more in the outer orbit than flourine. the more electrons in orbit the more reactive. argon is not used in lightbulbs cuz if it was, the lightbublg would explode

  • @BowlingFreak218 you are so wrong!!! how embarrassing - ah well, at least yr anonymous....

  • @jeebersjumpincryst im just being a troll

  • @BowlingFreak218 You are so full of shit. Find a chemical that argon reacts with. Go on.

    oh wait, IT DOESNT. ITS INERT. FLUORINE IS EXTREMELY REACTIVE. YOU ARE WRONG.

    Every atom wants a full outer shell of electrons, or 8. That is why the noble gasses are so unreactive, because they have full outer shells.

    Seriously, im suprised you can even turn on your computer.

  • @KnexGod03 IM JUST BEING A TROLL

  • @BowlingFreak218 Well then you are a sad excuse for a human being...

  • @KnexGod03 whats that supposed to mean?

  • @BowlingFreak218 they put argon in lightbulbs to stop the atom of tungsten (from the wire) reacting with air and blackening the bulb ... shit for brains !!

  • @BowlingFreak218 they put argon in lightbulbs to stop the atoms of tungsten (from the wire) reacting with air and blackening the bulb ... shit for brains !!

  • don't talk about stuff you don't actually know, you just look stupid

  • okay spazzes, obvliosly since then, ive learned that what i said is not true, thank you for telling me. it is in fact the most reactive non metal.

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  • yep. check webelements. its the most reactive.

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  • i'm not 100% sure on how it works, but i know it involves the use of unused electrons in lower shells.

  • @safibn1 The reason for Krypton reacting with fluorine - and nothing else - is that its ionization potential is rather low for a noble gas. This is due to the size of the atom. Let's imagine a shell model for simplicity. The lower you go in the periodic table, the bigger the atoms get because more and more electrons are added in shells that get bigger and bigger. However, the further the electrons get away from the nucleus, the less they are attracted by it and can thus be more easily removed.

  • dude, i would love to see that lazer!

  • @xxfinnellxx its whiteish blue :D. Although i never seen it real life, but i did in millions of photos!

  • @xxfinnellxx plus it is very dangerous, the lazer, so be careful!

  • @xxfinnellxx it's ultra-violet - or weren't you listening

  • @xxfinnellxx .youtube.com/watch?v=gJdf9pfS9­D0&feature=related.

    thats your krypton laser

  • I FIND THIS HILARIOUS!

  • I'd totally love to see krypton difluoride react with caesium ;)

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  • Well, according to Wikipedia "Caesium" is the standard IUPAC and internationally used name, only in the US it's called "Cesium"

  • That's not a compound because when you say it the words just don't sound right together. And they don't flow. For instance if you were to say Sodium Hydroxide, which flows perfectly.

  • LOL... if you look at some systematic IUPAC names, especially for organic compounds, you'll notice that most of them do anything else but "flow", for example the systematic name for THC:

    (−)-(6aR,10aR)-6,6,9-trimethyl­-3-pentyl-6a,7,8,10a-tetrahydr­o-6H-benzo[c]chromen-1-ol

    Now tell me how that does "flow"...The compound exists nevertheless ;)

  • Is that a wig?

  • It's freaking awesome!! When I'm older, my hair is going like that!

  • nope its the real thing. hes awesome

  • Krypton is the junk.

  • Sounds like this technology could be used to make phaser blasters! KAPOW!!! KAPOW!!!

  • No, no, it's pew pew.

  • ya, duh!

    pew, pew pew, peww

  • pew p'pew!

  • OMG it can kill Superman !!!!

  • no, thats kryptonite.

  • o crap then i did fooked up :(

  • where is that on the periodic table? :)

  • It is not real, although in the Superman series they gave the supposed formula of kryptonite and it was found to occur in real life, although not the glowy green superman killing kind.

  • ehm... you DO know it is real, yes?

  • Talking about krypton*ITE* Lrn2Read.

  • ah yes, sry. and its Read2Lrn >_> :P

  • Really depends on whether you have lrnd2read already!

  • it was a joke? >_>

  • It wasn't a joke! <_<

  • Actually Kryptonite is a compound of krypton and...... nah I'm kiddin heheh.

  • Where does the name come from and does it have anything to do with Kryptonite?

  • Krypton was discovered in 1898, which makes any association with Superman's home planet fairly unlikely. It was pretty difficult to isolate, occurring in only 1 part per million of the atmosphere, and was derived by an elaborate process of distilling liquid air. Probably for that reason, it was named krypton which is Greek for "the hidden one." Siegel and Schuster used the name for Superman's home world in 1938. Kryptonite, of course, is a meteorite from the remains of planet Krypton.

  • @ELuhn thank you for that useless information, wanna be professor.

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