positional spacer
Laboratory News - The Scientists' Online Newspaper

Search:

Laboratory and science talk
 
Laboratory News Directory

 Product Categories

 Biochemistry [24]

 Biotechnology [6]

 Chemistry [34]

 Consumables [48]

 Engineering [67]

 Environment [6]

 Haematology [2]

 Health [10]

 Health & Safety [35]

 Imaging [18]

 Lab Design & Storage [47]

 Lab Services [28]

 Microbiology [18]

 Pharma [13]

 Recruitment [1]

 Sample Preparation [42]

 Separation Techniques [17]

 Software [43]

 Spectroscopy [12]

 Test Equipment [11]

 OTHER CATEGORIES

 Associations [68]

 

Laboratory News Directory is
not responsible for the content of external internet sites

 
 
 
 
 

Date:  

You are here: Science News - Sign up to receive an email newsletter

Elements are music to chemist's ears

Here at Lab News we like to think we are pretty up on current scientific debate, and if there was ever a burning question for our times it must be “what chemical elements are most cited in music?” No? Just us and a Spanish chemist then.  

 

According to a study carried out by Santiago Álvarez, professor at the School of Chemistry of the University of Barcelona, the four chemical elements cited most often in musical songs and compositions are, in this order, silver, gold, tin and oxygen, followed by copper and iron.

“The idea behind this arose during the events held in 2007 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the death of Mendeléiev, the Russian chemist who created the periodic table of elements,” said Álvarez. He concluded that an analysis of song titles and group names shows that: “a non-negligible portion of scientific terminology has already been incorporated into popular tradition, although this is often used superficially.”

To quantify the presence of these elements in the music market, Álvarez analysed the English and Spanish names of each element in a musical cyber store. In general, with the exception of oxygen, the elements that appear most frequently in musical compositions are the metals seen most often over the history of humanity and daily life, says Álvarez.

“Silver and gold share the pedestal of popular imagination. Both appear in songs not only because they are components of a large variety of objects, but also because they are the symbol of wealth, luxury and power.”

The chemical element often related to love is oxygen. So, for example The Spice Girls sing about a love that is “as essential as oxygen” in their song Oxygen, a name that is also used by the Christian music group Ávalon as the title for one of its albums.

The final aim of the study published in the New Journal of Chemistry, was not so much a comprehensive statistical analysis but rather to build bridges between science and music, says Álvarez. 

Perhaps he should have gone further and tailored a few well known tracks for the sake of his quest. May we suggest Sweet home Aluminium, or perhaps Hotel californium. Although we concede that trying to shoehorn ununquadium into popular culture maybe a bridge too far.

Printer friendly version of Laboratory News articlePrinter Friendly version

 

Comment on this article

Labnews.co.uk is your website - so tell us what you think. Just complete the form below, and lets get the debate started!

 

Name:

Email:
This field is optional and will only be used if we need to contact you.
Your email address will not be displayed on the site.


Comment:

Please enter the characters shown in the image below

 

captcha



 

See other news items

Fangs for the inspiration
A word in your shell like...
Marine creatures get a pounding
Tomatoes to carry Alzheimer's vaccine
Ulcer bug discovered in mummies
'MitoCarta' maps out organelle
New appointment promises to bee a success
Livestock superbugs leave few treatment options
Funding council make 'difficult choices' to deliver £2 billion
Huge Camera to shed light on dark energy
Cells gobble up micro-doughnuts
Sea-faring rubber snakes help solve energy crisis
Plastic fantastic for electronics industry
Spin-out restores antibiotic action
Prosthetics company reaches for success
Lab rats dive straight in to race
Super computer proves to be a real chatter box
Anatomists face the facts
Exploding star ends decade long search
Is allergy a cruel evolutionary throwback?
Can Science Feed Africa?
Stem cell breakthrough closes gap between mouse and human studies
Science gets in the festival spirit
New skills plan for UK biosciences
Men and chocolate - both have a grey old time
Space penetrator a smashing success
Dissolving glass stimulates bone growth
Collaboration extends cancer research tools
Sticky patents licenced from MOD

Laboratory News ArchiveVisit the Laboratory News archive

Laboratory News Feature ArchiveVisit the Laboratory Science and Research Features archive
Laboratory News Products ArchiveVisit the Laboratory Products, Equipment and Supplies archive

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
positional spacer