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Follow the adventures of the crew of the starship /Akus Moby/ as they explore The Spinward Main.
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StanleyDerek
Stanley, Derek

Mon

Mar 18
2002

18:42Z

Shawn gets rolling aka "Our lesson in Barium for the day.. ."

Here's what it's good for.  =)  Among the obvious reasons...

BARIUM
See also: Chemical Compounds 
(bār“eem)[Gr.,heavy], metallic chemical element; symbol Ba; at. no. 56; at.
wt. 137.33; m.p. 725; b.p. 1,640; sp. gr. 3.5 at 20; valence +2. Barium is a
soft, silver-white, chemically active, poisonous metal with a face-centered
cubic crystalline structure. It is an alkaline-earth metal in group IIa of
the periodic table . Its principal ore is barite (barium sulfate); it also
occurs in the mineral witherite (barium carbonate). The pure metal is
obtained by the electrolysis of fused barium salts or, industrially, by the
reduction of barium oxide with aluminum. Barium is often used in
barium-nickel alloys for spark-plug electrodes and in vacuum tubes as a
drying and oxygen-removing agent. Barium oxidizes in air, and it reacts
vigorously with water to form the hydroxide, liberating hydrogen. In moist
air it may spontaneously ignite. It burns in air to form the peroxide, which
produces hydrogen peroxide when treated with water. Barium reacts with
almost all of the nonmetals; all of its water-soluble and acid-soluble
compounds are poisonous. Barium carbonate is used in glass, as a pottery
glaze, and as a rat poison. Chrome yellow (barium chromate) is used as a
paint pigment and in safety matches. The chlorate and nitrate are used in
pyrotechnics to provide a green color. Barium oxide strongly absorbs carbon
dioxide and water; it is used as a drying agent. Barium chloride is used in
medicinal preparations and as a water softener. Barium sulfide phosphoresces
after exposure to light; it is sometimes used as a paint pigment. Barite,
the sulfate ore, has many industrial uses. Because barium sulfate is
virtually insoluble in water and acids, it can be used to coat the
alimentary tract to increase the contrast for X-ray photography without
being absorbed by the body and poisoning the subject. Barium salts give a
characteristic green color in the flame test . Barium metal was first
isolated in 1808 by Sir Humphry Davy by electrolysis. 
  

-----Original Message-----
From: Eris Reddoch
To: akus@phoenyx.net
Sent: 3/18/02 10:27 AM
Subject: Re: [akus] Shawn gets rolling

Stanley, Derek wrote:

>-----Original Message-----
>From: Eris Reddoch
>
>Shawn spends the entire morning digging into all the data sources on
>Sequi and comes up with nine possible cargos...
>
>Lot 1:  Barium (190 dtons) 2,660,000 marks  **
>
>OOC - That's a whole lot of enema's...  =)
>
LOL!  Yeah, but barium *must* be used for something besides *that*, 
mustn't it? 

Eris
AKU GM

ErisReddoch
Eris Reddoch

Tue

Mar 19
2002

04:24Z

Shawn gets rolling aka "Our lesson in Barium for the day.. ."

On 03/18/02 at 12:42 PM,  "Stanley, Derek" 
said:

>Here's what it's good for.  =)  Among the obvious reasons...



So, don't get it wet. 

Eris
AKU GM

-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
"Eris Reddoch"     using MR/2 ICE #245
http://www.crosswinds.net/~erisr
-----------------------------------------------------------

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