One of the more than 117 presently known kinds of substances that constitute all matter at and above the level of atoms (the smallest units of any element). All atoms of an element are identical in nuclear charge (number of protons) and number of electrons (&see; atomic number), but their mass (atomic weight) may differ if they have different numbers of neutrons (&see; isotope). Each permanently named element has a one- or two-letter chemical symbol. Elements combine to form a wide variety of compounds.
All elements with atomic numbers greater than 83 (bismuth), and some isotopes of lighter elements, are unstable and radioactive (&see; radioactivity). The transuranium elements, with atomic numbers greater than 92 (&see; uranium), artificially created by bombardment of other elements with neutrons or other particles, were discovered beginning in 1940. The most common elements (by weight) in Earth's crust are oxygen, 49%; silicon, 26%; aluminum, 8%; and iron, 5%. Of the known elements, 11 (hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, and the six noble gases) are gases under ordinary conditions, two (bromine and mercury) are liquids (two more, cesium and gallium, melt at about or just above room temperature), and the rest are solids. &Seealso; periodic table.
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