Another idea for a crystal would be to refract photons going through it into several different paths. And to make crystals naturally you would have to cool a concentrated amount of, say, salt or powder. So if heated or bombarded with neutrons, the crystals would turn back into their constituents.
Rconover The one thing also is that photons are light. Tungsten was a by you reading. And that if we used real chemistry on PT it would be super hard to program. This is why mixing dust and water doesn't happen. Tungsten is resisting the electrical flow giving off light or photons.
My english is bad, so i present only a short list: - radium (most radioactive) - wolfram (high melting point) - isothermal area - isobaric arae - barium (burn green flame) - plumbum (heavy, fusible)
playermet I believe that Radium is not as radioactive as some other elements, I believe that every Transuranium Element is more radioactive than the last because of its uneven proportion of neutrons to electrons
- side note: (not to anyone) I think that Protons and Electrons under EXTREME pressure and A MASSIVE AMOUNT of energy should they go through and abide by the W+- Boson laws of quantum physics because of the Conservation of Charge where everything must be countered
Wilq
Again: Not protons, the element cannot be its element if it doesn't have the correct number of protons.
Wolfram is the same thing as Wolframium, which is the same as Tungsten which I believe is the same thing as what we have now which is METL
It would be useful for an element that behaves just like spark, minus the heating effect.
In reality, electricity won't heat up whatever it's traveling through unless it has a high resistance.
Perhaps something like ELEC, also some radioactive decays would emit electrons as particles which would on contact with a conductor, be absorbed into it.
Rconover:
the same as Tungsten which I believe is the same thing as what we have now which is METL
Except that METL melts at 1000 C
Rconover:
Again: Not protons, the element cannot be its element if it doesn't have the correct number of protons.
Radium undergoes both alpha and beta decay, so it releases helium nuclei (2 protons 2 neutrons) and in the latter decay, electrons. Radium WILL decay into Radon gas, but its half life is 1600 years so it's pretty much unnoticeable.