Mailing List Archive

Mailing List: techdiver

Banner Advert

Message Display

From: Tom Zarcone <Tom.Zarcone@MC*.Co*>
To: "'techdiver@aquanaut.com'" <techdiver@aquanaut.com>
Subject: Helium
Date: Wed, 12 Nov 1997 11:14:49 -0600
Organization: MCI
From Compton's Encyclopedia:

HELIUM. Before its presence was known on Earth, helium was identified in the 
sun. In 1868 a British astronomer, Joseph Norman Lockyer, used spectral
analysis 
to isolate helium in the sun's spectrum. Thus helium got its name from the
Greek 
word helios, meaning "sun."

Helium is a colorless, odorless, gaseous element. It is chemically inert; hence
it 
will not burn or react with other materials. Helium has the lowest boiling
point of 
any element. Next to hydrogen, it is the lightest known gas and the second most 
abundant element in the universe. It is found in great abundance in the stars,
where 
it is synthesized by nuclear fusion of hydrogen. In the Earth's atmosphere,
helium 
is present only in about 1 part per 186,000 because the Earth's gravity is not
strong 
enough to prevent its gradual escape into space. The helium present in the
Earth's 
atmosphere has been generated by the radioactive decay of heavy substances.

Most of the world's helium occurs in natural-gas deposits in the United States.
Smaller 
supplies have been discovered in Canada, South Africa, the Sahara Desert, and
elsewhere. 
Its lightness and nonflammability make helium ideal for use in the inflation of
lighter-than-air 
craft. Because helium's boiling point is close to absolute zero, it is widely
used in low-
temperature research. It is also vital to the study of superconductivity.
Helium is used 
in arc welding. Deep-sea divers breathe a helium-oxygen mixture to prevent
decompression 
sickness, also called the bends.

--
Send mail for the `techdiver' mailing list to `techdiver@aquanaut.com'.
Send subscribe/unsubscribe requests to `techdiver-request@aquanaut.com'.

Navigate by Author: [Previous] [Next] [Author Search Index]
Navigate by Subject: [Previous] [Next] [Subject Search Index]

[Send Reply] [Send Message with New Topic]

[Search Selection] [Mailing List Home] [Home]