Helium is a very unusual and interesting element, because it is the second most abundant element in the universe and yet it does not support life. This paper reviews helium, how it was discovered, what its uses are, and where it can be found.
Helium - History
In the literature available on helium, author Heather Hasan writes that in 1785 a man named Henry Cavendish (1731-1810) discovered that the air humans breathe was made up of more than oxygen (O2), nitrogen (N2), and carbon dioxide (CO2). But Cavendish did not technically discover helium albeit he knew something else was present beside the known elements referenced in the sentence above this one (Hasan, 2006).
The historically accepted version of the discovery of helium came eighty years later (in 1868) when French astronomer Pierre-Jules-Cesar Janssen was conducting studies of the sun. Using a spectroscope (which identifies elements by the spectrum of various lines produced when the elements are heated), Janssen noted a "…yellow line that did not belong to any element" that had been...
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