When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. White phosphorus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_phosphorus

    White phosphorus, yellow phosphorus, or simply tetraphosphorus (P 4) is an allotrope of phosphorus. It is a translucent waxy solid that quickly yellows in light (due to its photochemical conversion into red phosphorus ), [ 2 ] and impure white phosphorus is for this reason called yellow phosphorus.

  3. Hennig Brand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hennig_Brand

    Phosphorus must have been awe-inspiring to an alchemist: it was a product of man, and seeming to glow with a "life force" that did not diminish over time (and did not need re-exposure to light like the previously discovered Bologna Stone). Brand kept his discovery secret, as alchemists of the time did, and worked with the phosphorus trying ...

  4. Timeline of Irish inventions and discoveries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Irish...

    Irish inventions and discoveries are objects, processes or techniques which owe their existence either partially or entirely to an Irish person. Often, things which are discovered for the first time, are also called "inventions", and in many cases, there is no clear line between the two. Below is a list of such inventions.

  5. What is white phosphorus — and why is it so controversial ...

    www.aol.com/white-phosphorus-why-controversial...

    It can cause “excruciating burns and lifelong suffering,” a Human Rights Watch spokesperson said.

  6. White phosphorus munition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_phosphorus_munition

    This page is subject to the extended confirmed restriction related to the Arab-Israeli conflict. US Air Force Douglas A-1E Skyraider dropping a 100-pound (45 kg) M47 white phosphorus bomb on a Viet Cong position in South Vietnam in 1966 White phosphorus munitions are weapons that use one of the common allotropes of the chemical element phosphorus. White phosphorus is used in smoke ...

  7. Phosphorus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorus

    Elemental phosphorus exists in two major forms, white phosphorus and red phosphorus, but because it is highly reactive, phosphorus is never found as a free element on Earth. It has an occurrence in the Earth's crust of about 0.1%, generally occurring as phosphate in minerals.

  8. 50 Surprising Facts From “Today I Learned” That Show How ...

    www.aol.com/80-today-learned-facts-too-020048179...

    While the cause was linked to the use of white phosphorus within 5 years, it took almost a century of strikes, bans, and taxes to stop its use in the industry. Image credits: Flares117

  9. Phosphorescence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorescence

    Around 1604, Vincenzo Casciarolo discovered a "lapis solaris" near Bologna, Italy. Once heated in an oxygen-rich furnace , it thereafter absorbed sunlight and glowed in the dark. In 1677, Hennig Brand isolated a new element that glowed due to a chemiluminescent reaction when exposed to air, and named it " phosphorus ".