Austrium
Austria - the name of the new chemical element proposed by Eduard Linnemann in 1886. As a chemist at Charles University in Prague he conducted experiments on the orthorhetical origin from Norway, during the work carried out over several years he detected spectral lines of 4165 and 1030 angstroms. was unable to attribute to any known substance. Linnemann's conclusions were published on May 6, 1886, after his death and conducting in-depth studies at the Prague Academy of Sciences. French chemist Paul Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran found that Eduard Linnemann's findings may be related to a derivative of gallium, a chemical element he discovered in 1875. Richard Pribram of Chernivtsi University then determined that austria is not a new element and is a derivative of gallium. Still, Pribram found that finding unidentified spectral lines could be the basis for a separate chemical compound that could be named Austria, which would be a tribute to Linneman. He pointed out, however, that the results of previous studies do not justify their continuation. Bibliography
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