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Chemical elements are the fundamental materials of which all matter is composed. From the modern  viewpoint, a substance that cannot be  decomposed into simpler substances by ordinary chemical processes is, by definition, an element. (From the Britanica);  Then thereare all these comopunds that one can make of them, and then what happens?  You need fancy instruments and techniques to see what's going on ... so how do you keep up with it all?

Simple ...   you just check the latest textbooks written on any these elements and techniques. This table provides hyperlinks to  a continuously updated database of books.  Just click on the link to find the latest!  Please note, some of the returned information may be linked to other material that contains the element's or technique's  name. 

Actinium
Aluminum
Americium
Antimony
Argon
Arsenic
Astatine
Barium
Berkelium
Beryllium
Bismuth
Boron
Bromine
Cadmium
Calcium
Californium
Carbon
Cerium
Cesium
Chlorine
Chromium
Cobalt
Copper
Curium
Dysprosium
Einsteinium
Erbium
Europium
Fermium
Fluorine
Francium
Gadolinium
Gallium
Germanium
Gold
Hafnium
Hahnium
Hassium
Helium
Holmium
Hydrogen

Indium
Iodine
Iridium
Iron
Krypton
Lanthanum
Lawrencium
Lead
Lithium
Lutetium
Magnesium
Manganese
Meitnerium
Mendelevium
Mercury
Molybdenum
Neodymium

Neon
Neptunium
Nickel
Nielsbohrium
Niobium
Nitrogen
Nobelium
Osmium
OxygenPalladium
Phosphorus
Platinum
Plutonium
Polonium
Potassium
Praseodymium
Promethium
Protactinium
Radium                 
Radon
Rhenium
Rhodium
Rubidium
Rutherfordium
Ruthenium
Samarium
Scandium
Seaborgium
Selenium
Silicon
Silver
Sodium
Strontium
Sulfur
Tantalum
Technetium
Tellurium
Terbium
Thallium
Thorium
Thulium
Tin
Titanium
Tungsten
Unnilhexium
Ununnilium
Uranium
Vanadium
Xenon
Ytterbium
Yttrium
Zinc
Zirconium
Centrifugation
Crystallization
Distillation
Extraction
Filtering
Chromatography
Electrophoresis
solubility
boiling point
vapor pressure
Analytical balance
Analytical chemistry
Analytical standards
Atomic absorption spectroscopy
gas chromatography
Atomic emission spectroscopy
Atomic energy levels
Atomic fluorescence spectroscopy
Auger electron spectroscopy
Beer-Lambert law
Bipolar transistor
Calibration
Capacitor
Capillary electrophoresis
Charge-coupled device
Chemical equilibrium
Chemiluminescence
Chromatography
Chromatography theory
CW-NMR
Coulometry
Cyclic voltammetry
Ion Detectors
Diatomic molecule
polarography
calorimetry
thermal analysis
Diffraction
Diodes
Discharge lamps
Discontinuous electrophoresis
Electrochemistry
Electrolytic methods
Electromagnetic radiation
Electromagnetic spectrum
Electron diffraction
Electron microscopy
Electron paramagnetic resonance
EPR
ESR
Electron spectroscopy
Electrophoresis
ESCA
XPSFabry-Perot interferometer
Field-effect transistor
FET
Flame-ionization
gas chromatography
photoionization
Fluorescence
Fluorimetry
Fourier-transform NMR
infrared spectrometer
FTIR
Fluorescence
atomic fluorescence
molecular fluorescence
Gas chromatography
Gas chromatography
Gated-integrator
Golay equation
Gravimetry
liquid chromatography
Inductively-coupled plasma excitation
Infrared absorption
Interferometer
absorption spectroscopy
Ion chromatography
Ion-trap mass spectrometry
Jablonski diagram
Laser spectroscopy
Laser-induced fluorescence
Le Chatelier's Principle
Light microscopy
Linear regression
Linear-sweep voltammetry
Liquid chromatography
Mach-Zender interferometer
Mass spectrometry
Michelson interferometer
Microchannel plate
Monochromator
Mossbauer spectroscopy
Neutron diffraction
polarography
Phosphorescence
Photomultiplier tube
PMT
Polarimetry
Polarography
Polychromators
Potentiometry
x-ray diffraction
Quadrupole mass spectrometry
Quantum mechanics
Raman spectroscopy
Resonance-ionization mass spectrometry
Resonance-ionization spectroscopy
Scanning tunneling microscopy
STM
SDS-PAGE electrophoresis
Silicon-controlled rectifier
Size-exclusion chromatography
Solid-state band theory
Spectrometer
Spectroscopy
Supercritical-fluid chromatography
Surface analysis
Thermal analysis
Thermogravimetry
Thin-layer chromatography
Titration
UV-VIS spectroscopy
Voltammetry
Wavefunctions
X-ray diffraction
X-ray fluorescence
photoelectron spectroscopy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here's what to get  YOUR KID OR YOUR KID-BROTHER (OR YOUR BROTHER'S KID) FOR CHRISTMAS .... THE SEGA DREAMCAST and a few games   WILL MORE THAN PLEASE THEM and they will remember and love you forever for it.   

 
Sonic Adventure (Dreamcast) by Sega of America, Inc.  THE GAME!
After several years in video game retirement, Sonic the Hedgehog returns as the star of a graphically stunning 3-D adventure game that blows away every other game in the genre. Sonic is joined by five of his friends in a massive quest that spans over 50 game levels filled with remarkable visuals and a pulsating soundtrack. Taking full advantage of the unprecedented processing power of the Dreamcast, Sega's development crew, Sonic Team, has designed several gravity-defying game levels that will keep gamers hooked.
 
 
 
Sonic Adventure: Prima's Official Strategy Guide
Kip Ward, Prima Development / Paperback / Published 1999 - -   The world's most famous hedgehog is back, now in 3D, in a world so big and breathtaking, only Sega Dreamcast could hold it. As Sonic and his friends jump and spin their way to adventure, you'll need Sonic Adventure: Prima's Official Strategy Guide to find all the hidden secrets. Inside you'll discover maps of every dazzling level, whereabouts of all the gold rings, detailed character and quest descriptions, tips for raising Chao and using the Virtual Memory Unit, and the locations if each level entrance and secret area.

 

 

Sonic Adventure; Official Strategy Guide
Paperback / Published 1999

This is it folks:  SEGA DREAMCAST  -  THE DREAM MACHINE

                            

 

 

 

 

 

IF YOU (or your kids)  DON'T HAVE IT  ... YOU ARE MISSIN OUT BIG TIME

 The Dreamcast system is, in a word, awesome. Really, it inspires awe. The first time someone fires up the game Soul Calibur and realizes that the graphics and gameplay are better than the arcade version, they're likely to faint. And Sonic Adventure, with its lightspeed gameplay, is sure to wow even the most jaded gamer--one part of the game consists of a richly detailed 3-D racetrack suspended in the funnel of a raging tornado!

It's amazing that such a small machine (it's about the size of your mousepad) can deliver such incredible performance. Chalk it up to superior engineering. Dreamcast's only downside is that it comes with only one controller and a demo disc. In order to truly take advantage of Dreamcast's capabilities, we recommend outfitting the controller with a Jump Pack and a Visual Memory Unit. Getting one or more extra controllers is also a good idea, since some of the best Dreamcast games support up to four players at once.

GET  THESE ALSO

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