” radium gives off both alpha and cosmic rays but to give off this energy means of course that both energies are there in the first place , obviously so when I said " captured " it refers to the fact that both alpha and cosmic rays are in the element radium in the first place even though radium couldn't capture or hold on to this energy for ever hence the radon gas
So now you're... what? Blaming it on a poor command of English (what IS your native language?)? You didn't mean what you wrote? And no, they aren't "there in the first place". It doesn't "capture and hold" the energy at all. The energy is a by-product of radium's decay. And it's not "hence" the radon gas. (Also a by-product.
radon gas is emitted by the decay of radium and radon is a highly radioactive gas as I said it must be ventalated out , in Uranium mines , so we know that it is a gas
Still doesn't answer ANY of my questions. Still doesn't address your false claim. Still doesn't explain why you bothered to bring up radium in a topic about water. Non-sequitur. Oxygen is a gas too. Do we have to ventilate that out of uranium mines?
what radium does in decay , make a high energy gas , radon is what H2O does , to lesser extent what the water molecule does is to burn off the quatum energy of the molecule and that happens because the of water molecule configuration meaning the point , of the state , of liquidity , is based on the molecule its self and the ability to release this energy
Huh? When? Evidence please. When does it "release this energy"? When water boils? What energy does water "release" while boiling? (Bearing in mind that energy must be applied to make it boil). I have no idea what you're talking about. And I'm still waiting for you to explain how radium supposedly "captures" energy.
sometimes D your pain not because sometimes you have good questions , sometimes you do but because your sophist
look D ( Dywyddyr ) so you know if you want to quote me on this or that comment , bring the whole content , context , not some snippet lets look at the whole picture of what I'm saying are you in ?
first , what I'm saying , is that , H2O , the liquidity of this molecule , is evidence of quantum energy , being released , because of the configuration of molecule its self inotherwords , it is the quarks , which can be combined , to give off an energy , whether in atomic ( one atom ) or molecule form
And you're a pain because you make claims you can't support. Then try punctuating your sentences. At the moment, as far as I'm concerned, I'm quoting complete sentences of yours. The picture of what you're saying? I've got the picture. It's a mixture of lies, false claims and ignorance. Why is it evidence? What energy is being released? You're simply making stuff up because you haven't got a clue. And one more time: What makes you think radium "captures energy"?
Geeze! Don't you realize that this makes zero sense? You are using real physics terms but it is like you are just randomly stringing them together. It is not your fault - you have no training but it is your faul to try to appear like you know what you are talking about. You asked some questions about water and why it is a liquid at room temp. If you didn't understand the responses or want to ask another question then do so - but don't make pronouncements about things you don't understand!
is radium hard to find the definition of ohh.. understand the responses , they are just incomplete responses
Oh well done! Post #72 was mine. At least you're maintaining the cluelessness. SO you want to start again, from a much later post? Is that so you can amend your earlier incorrect claims and pretend you haven't been lying? Or is it so that you go to school and learn something about reality before you continue posting?
Apparently it is. Since you have made numerous claims about the "definition" of radium and have so far failed to substantiate a number of them. Despite being asked to do so more than once.