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Chemistry Tutor Group in Lambton, New South Wales, Australia | Tutor/teacher



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Chemistry Tutor Group

Locality: Lambton, New South Wales, Australia

Phone: +61 459 184 742



Address: Corner of Fitzroy Rd and Tathra Rd 2299 Lambton, NSW, Australia

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23.01.2022 This is it: as of 2019, oganesson is the capstone of the periodic table, the element with the highest atomic number. Bucking group trends, element 118 is the no...ble gas that may be solid at room temperature and more reactive even than some fellow superheavy elements. Oganesson is named for Yuri Oganessian, nuclear physicist whose work contributed to the discovery of elements 107-118. Read more: https://bit.ly/2OPS5EI In celebration of the International Year of the Periodic Table, we are completing our Periodic Table on Show with artwork for elements 113-118. Stay tuned for the completed project tomorrow!



20.01.2022 In honour of the centenary of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), 2019 is the International Year of the Periodic Table! What better w...ay to begin the year than by reading about how this most important tool of modern chemistry came to be? Dmitri Mendeleev "was convinced that the chemical elements must be viewed as a collective entity," writes Mike Sutton for Chemistry World. His method of elemental organisation -- created for a textbook on chemistry -- was so powerful that it even allowed him to predict the discovery of elements not yet known at the time. See more

19.01.2022 "I much prefer the sharpest criticism of a single intelligent man to the thoughtless approval of the masses."--Johannes Kepler, born OTD 1571.

19.01.2022 Congratulations to Max Crossley, Peter Canfield and Jeff Reimers (UTS, formerly of the SoC) who made chemistry news headlines in 2018. Online readers of the Am...erican Chemical Society’s Chemical & Engineering News were polled What was the most memorable molecule of 2018 and Max, Peter and Jeff came in second out of 8 for the coolest molecules of 2018. This is a wonderful achievement and well deserved recognition of the outstanding work coming out of the School. Read more at: https://cen.acs.org/synthesis/CENs-molecules-year-2018//i49 and also check out an article from 2018 at https://sydney.edu.au//new-conformational-isomerism-discov See more



14.01.2022 While studying for my PhD I made lots of ferro-amine complexes and this is the colour of them. Well done Queensland Health.

13.01.2022 For hundreds of years, one of the most important standards of measurement for any chemist -- the kilogram -- has been "defined by a lump of metal in a Paris vau...lt." That may be about to change, writes Ian Sample for The Guardian. Metrologists from 57 nations will come together on Friday to vote on whether the official definition of the kilogram -- the last "metric unit still based on a solitary object" -- will be changed to refer to a fundamental constant.

10.01.2022 'I have looked further into space than any human being did before me.' Astronomer, William Herschel, was born #onthisday 1738. In 1781, Herschel identified Uran...us, the first planet to be discovered since Antiquity. He was appointed court astronomer to George III the following year, 1782. Working with his sister Caroline, whom he had trained, he made four complete surveys of the night sky and was the first person correctly to describe the Milky Way. Using his great forty-foot telescope constructed over four years, he found two new satellites of Saturn in 1789. Herschel's discoveries astonished the public and inspired Romantic writers like Blake, Byron and Keats. In his lifetime, Hershel discovered more than two thousand nebulae and over eight hundred double stars. This portrait, by Lemuel Francis Abbott, was painted in 1785 and is currently on display in Room 18 of the Gallery. http://ow.ly/3c6d30mCUbI



10.01.2022 Now there’s a job

09.01.2022 Fifty years ago, a Christmas Day orbit around the moon.

07.01.2022 We are the cosmos made conscious and life is the means by which the universe understands itself. Happy birthday to particle physicist Professor Brian Cox, bo...rn #onthisday 1968. After a music career with the bands Dare and D:Ream, Cox studied at the University of Manchester before becoming a Professor there in 2009. Cox has helped popularise science with television programmes including the series ‘Wonders of the Solar System’ and ‘Stargazing Live’. Cox's book ‘Why Does E=mc2?’ was published in 2009 and in 2010 he was awarded an OBE for his services to science. This photograph, by Paul Wolfgang Webster, was taken at the Museum of Science and Industry in Castlefield, Manchester in 2009. http://ow.ly/OmJD30nTY5o

07.01.2022 We are delighted to see that mathematician and computer scientist Alan Turing has been voted the winner of BBC Icons. You can find Turing's portrait on display in Room 31: http://ow.ly/BgYe30nBbPW

06.01.2022 "It has often and confidently been asserted, that man's origin can never be known: but ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge: it is th...ose who know little, and not those who know much, who so positively assert that this or that problem will never be solved by science. Naturalist, geologist, and originator of the theory of evolution, Charles Darwin was born #onthisday 1809. This portrait, by John Collier, can currently be seen on display among other key figures in Victorian science and technology in Room 27 of the Gallery. http://www.npg.org.uk//person/mp01196/charles-robert-darwin



01.01.2022 It is hard to express how utterly remarkable and astoundingly delightful it is that mathematical scribblings can predict something as bizarre as black holes and then, looking to the skies with sufficient diligence, we find them.

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