Custom Map: Helium

Started by AutoPost, May 20, 2011, 04:37:59 PM

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AutoPost

This topic is for discussion of map: Helium


Author: TonyP2000

Desc:
He is another map. It is much easier then it looks. Enjoy the surprise!

thepenguin

doing the whole periodic table?
We have become the creeper...

mthw2vc

If he were doing the whole periodic table, the next would be Lithium, or at least beryllium instead of quadium. (Or, if one wanted to remake hydrogen while sounding official, it would be deuterium ;))

thepenguin

Quote from: mthw2vc on May 20, 2011, 05:26:19 PM
If he were doing the whole periodic table, the next would be Lithium, or at least beryllium instead of quadium. (Or, if one wanted to remake hydrogen while sounding official, it would be deuterium ;))

or trinium
We have become the creeper...

pixlepix

Tritium. And double-bonded should come before triple bonded. Also, I don't think anyone is gonna play CW1 for a while.
I had a dream that I was playing CW2. It was fun. But, I lost :(

TonyP2000

Actually, I not creative enough to name my own planets, so ya, I just name them off of elements. BTW, quadruim (my remake of hydrogen) is actually the name of an unstable isotope of hydrogen.
Vote Tony!

mthw2vc

Well, every isotope of hydrogen except the simple proton is unstable, the difference is, hydrogen-4 has a half-life of well under a femtosecond and decays too quickly for there to be any potential practical value... ;)

UpperKEES

Quote from: mthw2vc on May 21, 2011, 07:18:03 AM
any potential practical value

Well, I guess Tony just introduced some practical value for it. :)
My CW1 maps: downloads - overview
My CW2 maps: downloads - overview

Grauniad

Quote from: mthw2vc on May 21, 2011, 07:18:03 AM
Well, every isotope of hydrogen except the simple proton is unstable, the difference is, hydrogen-4 has a half-life of well under a femtosecond and decays too quickly for there to be any potential practical value... ;)

Au contraire, my learned friend. 2H (deuterium) is stable. Now while it has one proton, so does 3H (tritium - half-life of > 12 years) and 4H (quadrium ), so I'm not sure where you were heading with your statement above.

A goodnight to all and to all a good night - Goodnight Moon